03896nam 2200613 450 991081053170332120230126212230.03-95489-649-4(CKB)2670000000534334(EBL)1640326(SSID)ssj0001216664(PQKBManifestationID)11796304(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001216664(PQKBWorkID)11197395(PQKB)10894713(MiAaPQ)EBC1640326(Au-PeEL)EBL1640326(CaPaEBR)ebr10856424(OCoLC)871779840(EXLCZ)99267000000053433420140414h20142014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrModern slavery in african land situations of trafficking women from ethiopia to sudan /Shewit GebreegziabherHamburg, Germany :Anchor Academic Publishing,2014.©20141 online resource (99 p.)Description based upon print version of record.3-95489-149-2 Includes bibliographical references.Modern Slavery in African Land; ACKNOWLEDGMENT; TABLE OF CONTENTS; ABSTRACT; ACRONYMS; DEFINITIONS; Chapter One: Rationale of the Study; 1.1. Statement of the Problem; 1.2. Research Objectives; 1.3. Research Questions; 1.4. Significance of the Study; 1.5. Scope of the Study; 1.6. Limitations of the study; 1.7. Structure of the Study; 1.8. Research Methodology; Chapter Two: Conceptual frameworks and the global, regional and national contexts of trafficking; 2.1. Contested Definitions of Trafficking; 2.2. Root Causes of Trafficking in Persons; 2.3. The Global and Regional Trafficking Patterns2.4. Human Trafficking Record of East African Countries2.5. The National Context of Trafficking in Women; 2.6. International and Regional Instruments; 2.7. National Instruments; Chapter Three: The situations of trafficking women from Ethiopia to Sudan through Metema Route; 3.1. Background Information of Interviewees; 3.2. Expectations and Reasons for Leaving; 3.3. The Recruitment Process and Negotiation with Brokers; 3.4. Means of Transportation; 3.5. The Traffickers Web: Sharing Benefits; 3.6. The Condition Confronts Women at Arrival; 3.7. The Work Environment3.8. The Moments of Being Captured by the Police3.9. Life in Prison; 3.10. Means of Returning Home; 3.11. Preventive (Counter Trafficking) Measures; Chapter Four: Conclusion and Recommendations; 4.1. Conclusion; 4.2. Recommendations; REFERENCES; List of Cases; List of Interviewees; Websites; APPENDICESThis study objects to explore the experiences of women who are victims of trafficking, and specializes in women from Ethiopia who are taken to the Sudan, particularly through the Metema trafficking route. The study demonstrates the way how the trafficking women victims were trapped by the web of the traffickers, the means of transportations, the manner of treatment throughout the trafficking process, and the forms of exploitations at the arrival point. Moreover, an endeavor is made in order to point out the human rights violations in the case of trafficking. The study is based on a critical reAfrican AmericansHistory1863-1877SlaveryUnited StatesHistoryWomenAfricaSocial conditions19th centuryWomen's rightsAfricaAfrican AmericansHistorySlaveryHistory.WomenSocial conditionsWomen's rights973.0496073Gebreegziabher Shewit1661219MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910810531703321Modern slavery in african land4017012UNINA