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      Two Birds with One Stone? Implications of conditional assistance in victim protection and prosecution of traffickers

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          Abstract

          Protection of victims and prosecution of traffickers are established as core principles in international and national anti-trafficking policies. In this article, we discuss the dilemmas of linking protection of victims (a term that includes social protection) to their cooperation with authorities, using Norway as a case. Our analysis of the Norwegian case is based on interviews with victims of trafficking, social workers, police and prosecutors, and examination of court decisions on cases of trafficking. The linking of protection and prosecution is anchored in international conventions and directives. While this is often framed as a mutual advantage for both protection and prosecution, in reality both goals may suffer. We discuss how the goal of prosecution affects assistance available to different groups of victims. It creates unequal access to assistance and different preconditions for well-being and predictability, depending on how useful their information about traffickers is perceived to be, and police capacity to investigate. We then move on to discuss how the incentive of protection for cooperation is interpreted and dealt with in the justice system. Victims who receive assistance and have a chance of getting permanent residence permits in exchange for their testimonies are considered to be less reliable and credible witnesses. This also brings into question how victims of trafficking are understood and constituted as witnesses. We discuss these issues in light of a broader literature on gender, law and victimhood.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Anti-Trafficking Review
          Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women
          01 May 2016
          : 0
          : 6
          :
          Article
          cb1ec1c093a04a019f741593f6573de3
          29bd308a-5240-4548-b9ff-7291b9a4e2f7

          This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

          History
          Categories
          General Works
          A

          Sociology,Anthropology,Social & Behavioral Sciences,General social science,Cultural studies
          Norway,human trafficking,conditionality,prosecution,assistance

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