Does Blackness Matter in the Antitrafficking Community? A Collaborative Work with Five Black Female Antitrafficking Activists A Discussion about America’s Racial Roots in Trafficking and the Impact that it has on Black Bodies in Antitrafficking Organ
Description
The issue of sex trafficking has been heightened the last several years but has deep history with racial injustice. Black women are disproportionately the victims of sex trafficking and criminalized in prostitution. However, within nonprofit agencies that help provide services and resources to these Black women, the women providing services do not proportionality represent the population being served. To investigate this problem of the lack of diversity and representation within antitrafficking organizations, the research conducts interviews with several Black women who are working for an antitrafficking organization. This study highlights the importance of representation within an organization to have better outcomes and participation of services without tokenizing the Black woman being hired. The research connects the individual experiences of being a token within an organization with the racial roots of sex trafficking to highlight the importance of representing the individuals being served. In order to accomplish this, the research employs qualitative interpretive research methods through semi structured interviews. It employs a critical race feminist theory approach to data analysis to show how Black women in antitrafficking organizations are tokenized but struggling to balance being the most likely to represent the women they are trying to serve.
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2023
Agent
- Author (aut): Tomlinson, Madeleine
- Thesis advisor (ths): Behl, Natasha
- Thesis advisor (ths): Smith-Cannoy, Heather
- Committee member: Redeker-Hepner, Tricia
- Publisher (pbl): Arizona State University