The
War on Human Trafficking
Price: $29.95
Subtitle: U.S. Policy Assessed
Author: Anthony M. DeStefano
Subject: Public Policy / Human Rights
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-4059-3
Pages: 224 pages. 7 tables
Publication Date: August 2007
Description:
The United States has taken the lead in efforts to end
international human trafficking-the movement of peoples from one
country to another, usually involving fraud, for the purpose of
exploiting their labor. Examples that have captured the headlines
include the 300 Chinese immigrants that were smuggled to the United
States on the ship Golden Venture and the young Mexican women smuggled
by the Cadena family to Florida where they were forced into
prostitution and confined in trailers.
The public's understanding of human trafficking is comprised
of terrible stories like these, which the media covers in dramatic, but
usually short-lived bursts. The more complicated, long-term story of
how policy on trafficking has evolved has been largely ignored. In The
War on Human Trafficking, Anthony M. DeStefano covers a decade of
reporting on the policy battles that have surrounded efforts to abolish
such practices, helping readers to understand the forced labor of
immigrants as a major global human rights story.
DeStefano details the events leading up to the creation of
the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000, the federal law that
first addressed the phenomenon of trafficking in persons. He assesses
the effectiveness of the 2000 law and its progeny, showing the
difficulties encountered by federal prosecutors in building criminal
cases against traffickers. The book also describes the tensions created
as the Bush Administration tried to use the trafficking laws to attack
prostitution and shows how the American response to these criminal
activities was impacted by the events of September 11th and the War in
Iraq.
Parsing politics from practice, this important book gets
beyond sensational stories of sexual servitude to show that human
trafficking has a much broader scope and is inextricable from the
powerful economic conditions that impel immigrants to put themselves at
risk.
About the Author:
Anthony M. DeStefano is a reporter for
Newsday covering New York City legal affairs and criminal
justice. Prior to joining Newsday , he was a reporter at
The Wall Street Journal. He is an attorney and member of the New
York State bar.
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Price: $29.95
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