ANTI-TRAFFICKING REVIEW - 15 DAYS EXTENSION OF CALL FOR PAPERS!!!
About the Review
The Review promotes a human rights based approach to anti-trafficking, and it aims to explore the issue in its broader context including gender analyses and intersections with labour and migrant rights. The journal offers a space for dialogue for those seeking to communicate new ideas and findings.
The Review is published by the Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women (http://www.gaatw.org/) on an annual basis. All articles are rigorously considered and peer reviewed.
CALL FOR PAPERS - 'Human Rights at the Border'
The Anti-Trafficking Review (http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/) calls for papers for a Special Issue 'Human Rights at the Border'. Papers may address: criminalisation of irregular migration, operational understandings of human rights, (non)identification of violations, human rights implications of screening for potential trafficking cases, transparency and accountability, discriminatory immigration policies, privatisation of immigration functions, trafficking and migration prevention policies, links between increased border security and trafficking, interceptions and push-backs, broker/agents' rights, and extraterritoriality. The Review welcomes articles that engage empirically grounded analysis of rights-based border-related programs. Also papers can more broadly address how borders and national security measures make migration more expensive and difficult, increasing risks, and, conversely, papers can address positive aspects of border interventions that may uphold human rights.
This issue is to be guest edited by Dr. Sverre Molland and co-edited by Rebecca Napier-Moore.
Please send submissions to [log in to unmask] before the EXTENDED commissioning deadline: 15th January 2013.
The Anti-Trafficking Review has an editorial policy of publishing in clear, simple and non-academic English, in order to be of use to the widest possible readership. The Anti-Trafficking Review particularly welcomes contributions from practitioners and affected persons with first hand experiences to share.
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