‘shock and awe’: a critique of the ghana-centric child trafficking discourse

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ID: 151942
2017
This paper is a critique of the dominant anti-trafficking discourse and activism in Ghana. It argues that the discourse grossly underplays the role of external forces in shaping the conditions underpinning children’s labour mobility in the past and the hardships underpinning the phenomenon today. In place of critical analysis and understanding, anti-child-trafficking campaigns employ melodramatic ‘shock and awe’ tactics and a tendency to blame local culture or traditions for activists’ claims of ‘pervasive’ child trafficking in the country. The paper suggests that dominant anti-trafficking discourse and activism in Ghana thus reinvigorate historic and persistent external causal agents of inequality which drive Ghanaian children’s labour mobility today. The paper demonstrates this problem and offers correctives to it.
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okyere2017anti-traffickingshock Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors ;Samuel Okyere
Journal plos medicine
Year 2017
DOI 10.14197/atr.20121797
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