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Trafficking Justice

How Russian Police Enforce New Laws, from Crime to Courtroom
  • Lauren A. McCarthy
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2016
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About this book

In response to a growing human trafficking problem and domestic and international pressure, human trafficking and the use of slave labor were first criminalized in Russia in 2003. In Trafficking Justice, Lauren A. McCarthy explains why Russian police, prosecutors, and judges have largely ignored this new weapon in their legal arsenal.

Author / Editor information

Lauren A. McCarthy is Assistant Professor of Political Science and Legal Studies at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Reviews

Y. Polsky:

The volume takes into account more than 5,500 relevant articles made available in Russian mass media, interview data, and participant observation to summarize the results of how the Russian authorities treat this painful problem. Among the achievements of this research study is its useful analysis of prostitution-related human trafficking. McCarthy selected an impressive list of sources that includes most recent studies of this subject alongside the works of previous generations of scholars. The language of this book is accessible to various levels of readership and is one of many merits of this worthy book.

Peter H. Solomon Jr.:

It is rare to encounter serious research on the implementation of new laws anywhere, let alone in Russia, and even rarer such a sensitive, nuanced, well-written, and authoritative account. InTrafficking JusticeLauren McCarthy explains how in 2003 Russia added to its criminal code articles on human trafficking and the use of slave labor, in part to satisfy international obligations and modelled on language from other countries. The author brings to bear the best insights and perspectives from the interdisciplinary field of socio-legal studies... this book has a lot to say to anyone interested in the pursuit of a reform agenda through legal change.

Robert Legvold:

In a fine addition to the literature on how Russian governance really works, McCarthy traces this laxity to what she calls 'institutional machinery': incentives, structures, and a culture operating within Russian legal and judicial institutions that militate against the strenuous enforcement of new rules that introduce complex choices and burdensome procedures on law enforcement agencies.

Mary Buckley, University of Cambridge, author of Mobilizing Soviet Peasants: Heroines and Heroes of Stalin's Fields :

This fascinating book reveals how and why legislation on human trafficking created uncertainties in interpretation for Russian law enforcement and how institutional machinery shaped and constrained the investigation of the complexities of human trafficking. Taking an original approach that casts those in law enforcement as 'street-level bureaucrats' who respond to institutional incentives and disincentives, Lauren A. McCarthy’s excellent analysis challenges stereotypically negative characterizations of Russian conviction rates by delving into structures, norms, practices, and culture to explain why and how traffickers may indeed be convicted but not necessarily under the Articles in the Criminal Code on human trafficking and the use of slave labor. Drawing on thorough fieldwork in Russia and illuminating interview data, McCarthy brings her material alive with vivid quotations and examples that reveal informal criteria, hierarchical subordination, the worries of investigators, the fluidity of charging practices, and interagency tensions. This material is accessible and essential reading for those interested in Russian society, law, and politics and in global issues of tackling human trafficking and slavery.

Brian Taylor, Syracuse University, author of State Building in Putin's Russia: Policing and Coercion after Communism:

Trafficking Justice is an impressively researched and convincing book. Lauren McCarthy both provides an overview of human trafficking in Russia and gives a fresh perspective on the workings of the Russian state from the inside. It is a unique and important contribution.


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
January 7, 2016
eBook ISBN:
9781501701375
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
304
Illustrations:
2
Line drawings:
2
Other:
2 line figures, 21 tables, 5 charts
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