Contents |
Chapter 1: Introduction: the variety of ethical dilemmas (Dina Siegel and Roos de Wildt) -- Part I: Sex trafficking -- Chapter 2: Getting the balance right: the ethics of researching women trafficked for commercial sexual exploitation (Helen Easton and Roger Matthew) -- Chapter 3: Ethics as process, ethics in practice: researching the sex industry and trafficking (Liz Kelly and Maddy Coy) -- Chapter 4: Ethnographic research on the sex industry: the ambivalence of ethical guidelines (Roos de Wildt) -- Chapter 5: Ethnicity, crime and sex work – a triple taboo (Dina Siegel).-Chapter 6: The Ethical Minefield in Human Trafficking Research—Real and Imagined (Sheldon X. Zhang) -- Part II: Labour trafficking -- Chapter 7: Negotiating anonymity, informed consent and ‘illegality’: researching forced labour experiences among refugee and asylum seeker in the UK (Hannah Lewis) -- Chapter 8: Ethics, methods and moving standards in research on migrant workers and forced labour(Sam Scott and Alistair Geddes) -- Chapter 9: Doing no harm. Ethical challenges in research with trafficked persons (Rebecca Surtees and Anette Brunovskis) -- Chapter 10: Trust, Rapport and Ethics in Human Trafficking Research: Reflections on Research with Male Labourers from South Asia in Singapore (Sallie Yea) -- Part III: Child trafficking -- Chapter 11: Getting What We Want: Experience and Impact in Research with Survivors of Slavery (Zhaleh Boyd and Kevin Bales) -- Chapter 12: No Love for Children: Reciprocity, Science and Engagement in the Study of Child Sex Trafficking (Anthony Marcus and Ric Curtis) -- Chapter 13: Walking the tightrope: Ethical dilemmas of doing fieldwork with youth in US sex markets (Amber Horning and Amalia Paladino) -- Part IV: Organ trafficking -- Chapter 14: At the Organ Bazaar of Bangladesh: In Search of Kidney Sellers (Monir Moniruzzaman) -- Chapter 15: On Adopting Heretical Methods-From Barefoot to Militant to Detective Anthropology (Nancy Scheper-Hughes). |