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My Name Is Not Natasha: How Albanian Women in France Use Trafficking to Overcome Social Exclusion (1998-2001)

Posted By: AlenMiler
My Name Is Not Natasha: How Albanian Women in France Use Trafficking to Overcome Social Exclusion (1998-2001)

My Name Is Not Natasha: How Albanian Women in France Use Trafficking to Overcome Social Exclusion (1998-2001) (Imiscoe Dissertations) by John Davies
May 22, 2009 | ISBN: 9053567070 | Pages: 324 | PDF | 2 MB

This book challenges every common presumption that exists about the trafficking of women for the sex trade. It is a detailed account of an entire population of trafficked Albanian women whose varied experiences, including selling sex on the streets of France, clearly demonstrate how much the present discourse about trafficked women is misplaced and inadequate. The heterogeneity of the women involved and their relationships with various men is clearly presented as is the way women actively created a panoptical surveillance of themselves as a means of self-policing. There is no artificial divide between women who were deceived and abused and those who -choose sex work; in fact the book clearly shows how peripheral involvement in sex work was to the real agenda of the women involved. Most of the women described in this book were not making economic decisions to escape desperate poverty nor were they the uneducated na ve entrapped into sexual slavery. The women's success in transiting trafficking to achieve their own goals without the assistance of any outside agency is a testimony to their resilience and resolve.