GPIS Thesis Defense 3/1/16
Old Dominion University
College of Arts and Letters
The Graduate Program in International Studies
Thesis Defense
Karemn Matusek
This work will focus on the act of sex trafficking in India as a gendered representation of three distinct dimensions of India's existing conditions: 1) gender inequality, 2) historic and current cultural scripts, and 3) socio-economic conditions. This paper contends that these three dimensions are at the heart of sex trafficking and serve as forms of violence against women. Furthermore, in adding to the literature, this paper proposes a victim-focused/human rights focused approach, which will assist India in successfully combating trafficking within its own borders and lend new levels of analysis in understanding systemic responses to this global circumstance so central to the context of globalization. In supporting these claims, this project analyzes a combination of qualitative and quantitative data sets, primarily categorized as secondary sources, which have been compiled throughout several years on the topic of sex trafficking. Furthermore, in supporting a victim-focused/human rights focused approach, information gathered from interviews with two employees of the South African organization Activists Networking Against the Exploitation of Children (ANEX), as well as South African service provider guidelines to assisting victims of trafficking, will be detailed and analyzed.
Thesis Chair: Dr. Jennifer Fish
Thesis Committee: Dr. David Eranest Dr. Anfgelica Huizar
Batten Arts and Letters Building
Room 7009
March 1
10:45 a.m. -12:30 p.m.
Posted By: Margo Stambleck
Date: Thu Feb 25 08:42:47 EST 2016