2012
DOI: 10.7227/ijs.20.1.3
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International Cooperation in Combating Human Trafficking in the EU: Evidence from Turkey

Abstract: Human trafficking lies at the heart of international organised crime. It is concerned with profits in terms of the exploitation of human beings. It is an abuse of basic rights. The enormous interest and concern for trafficking and human struggling is factual evidence. In the EU, policy on irregular migration is driven by the perception that the member states risk being overwhelmed by large numbers of irregular migrants thought to constitute a threat to national security. This has implications for policy measur… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Criminological research also emphasizes the importance of defining the nature of this crime and determining its composition to successfully combat it (Kownacki, 2021). Despite considerable research, there is a lack of research in the context of international legal cooperation between states in the Central Asian regions on preventing and combating human trafficking (Oguz, 2012). The issue of the human rights of trafficked persons should be an essential element in all efforts to prevent and combat the phenomenon.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Criminological research also emphasizes the importance of defining the nature of this crime and determining its composition to successfully combat it (Kownacki, 2021). Despite considerable research, there is a lack of research in the context of international legal cooperation between states in the Central Asian regions on preventing and combating human trafficking (Oguz, 2012). The issue of the human rights of trafficked persons should be an essential element in all efforts to prevent and combat the phenomenon.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These findings are consistent with Bale’s analysis of push and pull factors driving trafficking, as well as a 2010 OSCE report of trafficking in twenty‐five states (Bales, ; Aronowitz et al, ). These large‐ and medium‐n studies are accompanied by a robust body of country‐case studies considering supply‐and‐demand factors of trafficking across European states, Haiti, Israel, Kosovo, Russian Federation and post‐Soviet states, Sierra Leone, Southern Africa, Turkey, and the United States, to name a few (Brunovskis and Tyldum, ; Tiurukanova, ; Smith and de al Cuesta, ; Smith and Smith, ; Tverdova, ; Oğuz, ; Jac‐Kucharski, ; Kelemen and Johansson, ; Britton and Dean, ; Hacker, ).…”
Section: The Relationship Between Peacekeeping and Human Traffickingmentioning
confidence: 99%