Demystifies the term “trafficking” with a view to properly understand the trends, dimensions, and gaps in policy and law that need to be plugged.
Aiming to initiate fresh discussion on human trafficking, the book offers recommendations to curb organized international crime. It brings in a new perspective of identifying assimilative interaction between social and criminal justice systems, the progressive growth in socio-criminal legislations, and the universal demand of multiagency approach to combat trafficking. While criticizing the current practice of overgeneralization (for convenience), it helps understand the gaps in the framing (and implementation) of social policies and legal acts, and the systemic culture of turning a deaf ear to concerned stakeholders, which further aggravates the problem.
There are no reviews yet.