英国COVID-19大流行期间与现代奴隶制相关的风险和危害:一项多方法研究

Q1 Social Sciences
E. Such, A. Gardner, Minh Dang, N. Wright, Liana Bravo-Balsa, Vicky Brotherton, H. Browne, Nancy Esiovwa, Erika Jiménez, Benjamin Lucas, Emily Wyman, Zoe Trodd
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2019冠状病毒病大流行对全球经济和社会造成了严重影响,加剧了现有的社会不平等。这种"综合"流行病使受现代奴役和人口贩运影响的人民和社区面临多重伤害的高风险。本文采用证据综合、幸存者调查、网络监测和对话活动等多种方法,探讨COVID-19如何影响英国和美国与现代奴隶制/人口贩运相关的危害风险和危害途径。我们使用危害、风险、暴露和危害的概念以及公共卫生风险和复原力评估的工具,研究COVID-19如何放大现有的危害风险并产生进一步危害的新途径。我们还使用了一种新颖的复杂系统方法来表示风险关系,并展示了COVID-19的经济冲击和强制性社会隔离如何给受影响人群带来负面后果。本文提供了政策和实践见解,说明可以跨系统实施干预措施,以最大限度地减少剥削,以及地方主导的干预措施如何抵消大流行的破坏性影响(可持续发展目标5和16)。©2023作者。由Taylor & Francis Group, LLC授权出版。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Risks and Harms Associated with Modern Slavery during the COVID-19 Pandemic in the United Kingdom: A Multi-Method Study
The COVID-19 pandemic has considerably affected global economies and societies, exacerbating existing social inequalities. This "syndemic” pandemic has placed people and communities affected by modern slavery and human trafficking at elevated risk of multiple harms. This paper uses a mix of methods–an evidence synthesis, a survivor survey, web-monitoring, and dialogue events–to explore how COVID-19 has affected the risks and pathways to harm associated with modern slavery/human trafficking in the UK and U.S. We use concepts of hazard, risk, exposure, and harm and the tools of public health risk and resilience assessment to examine how COVID-19 has amplified existing risks of harm and generated new pathways to further harm. We also use a novel complex systems approach to represent risk relationships and demonstrate how the economic shock of COVID-19 and mandated social isolation have led to negative outcomes for affected people. The paper provides policy and practice insight into interventions can be implemented across systems to minimize exploitation and how locally led intervention can offset the damaging effects of the pandemic (SDGs 5 & 16). © 2023 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
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来源期刊
Journal of Human Trafficking
Journal of Human Trafficking Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
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