Missing, Presumed Trafficked: Towards non-binary understandings of ‘wayward’ youth in Jamaica

Authors

  • Jacqueline Sanchez Taylor
  • Julia O’Connell Davidson

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201222192

Keywords:

LGBTQ youth, child ‘sex trafficking’, missing children, binary thinking

Abstract

Boys and LGBTQ youth, especially those who go missing from home, have recently started to appear in mainstream anti-trafficking discourse as a group of children who are peculiarly vulnerable to human trafficking. This paper reports findings from research with Jamaicans who experienced various forms of violence and exploitation as children. Our data is consistent with the claim that boys and LGBTQ Jamaicans are amongst those who experience forms of violence and exploitation that policy makers often discuss under the heading ‘sex trafficking’. However, the same data also challenges the conceptual binaries used to frame assumptions about ‘sex trafficking’ as a significant threat to Jamaican youth and informs assumptions about missing children as victims of trafficking. In this way, the paper provides empirical support for criticisms of the turn towards including boys and LGBTQ youth as victims of ‘sex trafficking’, and of dominant discourse on ‘child trafficking’ more generally.

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Author Biographies

Jacqueline Sanchez Taylor

Jacqueline Sanchez Taylor is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the School of Law and Social Sciences, Royal Holloway. She has researched and published on female sex tourism and cosmetic surgery tourism and held grants for research on informal tourism economies in the Caribbean. She has a longstanding interest in feminist debates on sexuality and their intersection with questions about race and racism.

Julia O’Connell Davidson

Julia O’Connell Davidson is Professor of Social Research at the University of Bristol. She has longstanding research interests in economic life, sex work, childhood, and mobility, and is the author of Children in the Global Sex Trade (Polity, 2005) and Modern Slavery: The Margins of Freedom (Palgrave, 2015) as well as other works. She currently holds an ERC Advanced Grant for the project ‘Modern Marronage? The Pursuit and Practice of Freedom in the Contemporary World’.

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Published

27-09-2022

How to Cite

Sanchez Taylor, J., & O’Connell Davidson, J. (2022). Missing, Presumed Trafficked: Towards non-binary understandings of ‘wayward’ youth in Jamaica. Anti-Trafficking Review, (19), 9–27. https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201222192