New to Routledge in 2015:
JOURNAL OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING
The Journal of Human Trafficking is devoted to the dissemination of scholarship on all issues related to trafficking in persons and allied forms of contemporary slavery. The principal aim of the journal is to draw upon insights and expertise from a variety of disciplines and perspectives in order to better understand the global dimensions of – and evolving policy responses relating to – human trafficking. In keeping with this expansive mandate, the journal welcomes submissions in a range of areas, including:
– Enabling factors which contribute to global patterns of human trafficking;
– Connections and intersections between human trafficking, smuggling and migration;
– The theory and practice of resistance, rescue, rehabilitation and reintegration;
– The challenges and complications of prevention, prosecution, and policy intervention;
– The development and operation of legal regimes relating to human trafficking;
– The relationships between human trafficking, prostitution, gender and/or sexuality;
– Links between human trafficking, global governance, and/or the global economy;
– Popular representations of human trafficking and contemporary ‘slavery’;
– Innovative methods and strategies used to research human trafficking and policy responses;
– The effects of human trafficking upon health, psychology, childhood, welfare, and society.
This list is by no means exhaustive. In further recognition of the fact that the category of human trafficking can itself be understood and applied in multiple ways, the journal favors an expansive approach that links trafficking to allied issues such as bonded labor, forced labor for the state, forced marriage, hereditary bondage, wartime enslavement, and the abuse of migrant and domestic workers. Submissions are welcome from researchers, academics, and practitioners from a variety of disciplines and positions, including anthropology, criminology, family studies, social work, sociology, international relations, law, medicine, nursing and public health, psychology, gender studies, political science, and public policy.
All articles submitted to the journal will been subjected to an initial editorial screening and subsequent double-blind external peer review. Submissions adhering to APA style (6th ed.) are preferred.
Manuscripts for the Journal of Human Trafficking should be submitted to the journal’s Editorial Manager site at www.editorialmanager.com/jht. Please visit our website to view the full Instructions for Authors: www.tandfonline.com/uhmt. Questions can be submitted to the Editor-in-Chief, Rochelle Dalla, at rdalla1@unl.edu.
Upcoming Special Issue: Predators
The Journal of Human Trafficking will publish its first special issue on predators. The special issue will be Guest Edited by Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick. Interested authors can email the guest editor directly for more information: achoifitz.ceu@gmail.com.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF:
Rochelle L. Dalla
University of Nebraska- Lincoln, USA
ASSOCIATE EDITORS:
Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick
Central European University, Hungary
Joel Quirk
University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
Vijay Raghavan
Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India
Dominique Roe-Sepowitz
Arizona State University, USA
Donna Sabella
Drexel University, USA
Celia Williamson
University of Toledo, USA
BOOK REVIEW EDITORS:
Julie Kaye
Ambrose University College, Canada
John Winterdyk
Mount Royal University, Canada
INTERNATIONAL EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS:
Arun Kumar Acharya, Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo León, Mexico
Jacqueline Bhabha, Harvard University, USA
Alice Bellagamba, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, Italy
Emily Blank, Howard University, USA
Recep Boztemur, Middle East Technical University, Turkey
Casey Branchini, Johns Hopkins University, USA
No?l Busch-Armendariz, University of Texas-Austin, USA
Christopher Carey, Portland State University, USA
Rita Chaikin, Isha L’Isha-Haifa Feminist Center, Israel
Seo-Young Cho, University of Marburg, Germany
Meredith Dank, Urban Institute, Washington D.C., USA
Eileen Farao, American Embassy, New Delhi, India
Amy Farrell, Northeastern University, USA
Kirsten Foot, University of Washington, USA
Florian Forster, IOM, Hanoi, Vietnam
Bernard K. Freamon, Seton Hall University, USA
H. Richard Friman, Marquette University, USA
El?bieta M. Go?dziak, Georgetown University, USA
Miao Jia, Fudan University, China
Ray Jureidini, Lebanese American University, Lebanon and Qatar Foundation, Qatar
Oliver Kaplan, University of Denver, USA
Sharvari Karandikar-Chedda, Ohio State University, USA
Heather Komenda, Nairobi, Kenya
Frank Laczko, IOM, Switzerland
Richard Lotspeich, Indiana State University, USA
Lauren Martin, University of Minnesota, USA
Mohamed Y. Mattar, Johns Hopkins University, USA
Sioban Miles, Chab Dai, Cambodia
Veerendra Mishra, Madhya Pradesh, India and University of Minnesota, USA
P. Madhusoodanan Nair, New Delhi, India
Friday E. Okonofua, University of Benin, Nigeria
Timothy M. Palmback, University of New Haven, USA
Rhacel Salazar Parrenas, University of Southern California, USA
Einat Peled, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Benjamin Perrin, University of British Columbia, Canada
W. Courtland Robinson, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Elizabeth Saewyc, University of British Columbia, Canada
Andreas Schloenhardt, The University of Queensland, Australia
Louise Shelley, George Mason University, USA
Elena Shomos, US State Department, USA
Helen Stacy, Stanford University, USA
Helen Sworn, Chab Dai, Cambodia
Ginger Tanton, Northwestern University, USA
Mitali Thakor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Lisa L. Thompson, World Hope International, USA Headquarters
Christien van den Anker, University of the West of England, United Kingdom
Gillian Wylie, University of Dublin, Ireland
PUBLICATION DETAILS
Volume 1, 2015
4 issues per year
Print ISSN: 2332-2705
Online ISSN: 2332-2713
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