A Lie More Disastrous than the Truth: Asylum and the identification of trafficked women in the UK

Authors

  • Abigail Stepnitz

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201216

Keywords:

trafficking, asylum, re-victimisation, women’s rights, discrimination

Abstract

This article explores the impact that nationality can have on a person’s experience of being identified as a victim of trafficking in the UK. Responses to individuals and disparities in rates of recognition depending on nationality are cause for great concern. The rhetoric and the response to women who have experienced trafficking varies considerably depending upon the citizenship, residency and documentation status of the individual, particularly highlighting the differential treatment of trafficking cases of British women, European Union nationals, and third-country (non UK, non EU) nationals, the majority of whom are also asylum seekers. This differential treatment is played out in multiple ways, many of which result in women’s inability to realise procedural and substantive rights. The article examines the use of official “identification” mechanisms that place women into the administrative category of “victim”, and the central role of the asylum system in all areas of UK anti-trafficking responses.

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Author Biography

Abigail Stepnitz

Abigail Stepnitz is currently the National Coordinator for the Poppy Project, the largest independent anti-trafficking organisation in the UK, providing services to trafficked women in England and Wales as well as advocating and developing policy and best practice at the local and national levels. She also consults for the United Nations and the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe. She holds an MSc Human Rights from the London School of Economics.

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Published

01-06-2012

How to Cite

Stepnitz, A. (2012). A Lie More Disastrous than the Truth: Asylum and the identification of trafficked women in the UK. Anti-Trafficking Review, (1). https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201216