| Literature DB >> 27149330 |
Coral J Dando1, David Walsh2, Robin Brierley1.
Abstract
Modern slavery is less overt than historical state-sanctioned slavery because psychological abuse is typically used to recruit and then control victims. The recent UK Draft Modern Slavery Bill, and current UK government anti-slavery strategy relies heavily on a shared understanding and public cooperation to tackle this crime. Yet, UK research investigating public understanding of modern slavery is elusive. We report community survey data from 682 residents of the Midlands of England, where modern slavery is known to occur, concerning their understanding of nonphysical coercion and human trafficking (one particular form of modern slavery). Analysis of quantitative data and themed categorization of qualitative data revealed a mismatch between theoretical frameworks and understanding of psychological coercion, and misconceptions concerning the nature of human trafficking. Many respondents did not understand psychological coercion, believed that human trafficking did not affect them, and confused trafficking with immigration. The public are one of the most influential interest groups, but only if well informed and motivated towards positive action. Our findings suggest the need for strategically targeted public knowledge exchange concerning this crime.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27149330 PMCID: PMC4858279 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0153263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Categories (and verbal sub-categories) with exemplar quotes for understanding of psychological coercion (N = 682).
| Category | Exemplar Quotes |
|---|---|
| Imprisonment | When people are locked up so they can’t get out and are only allowed to leave the house for work [99]; Well if people are locked up they can’t leave the house so they are obviously coerced because they have no choice but to stay [421]; If people can’t drive and get locked up in the middle of the country they can’t get away and so they are coerced into doing something they might not otherwise do [112]; Coercion is obviously to do with locking people away or otherwise they would just leave [501] |
| Verbal threats to withhold money | Telling people they won’t get paid so this keeps them working [17]; People are shouted at and told they won’t get paid, but I don’t know if this coercive–it’s about threatening I think [667]; Telling them that they wont get any money unless they do more work, they must get paid eventually otherwise they wouldn't stay, would they? [519] |
| Verbal threats to injure | Telling people they won’t get paid so this keeps them working [17]; People are shouted at and told they won’t get paid, but I don’t know if this coercive–it’s about threatening I think [667]; Telling them that they wont get any money unless they do more work, they must get paid eventually otherwise they wouldn't stay, would they? [519] |
| Verbal threats to report to authorities | Threatening to contact the benefits office [89]; Saying that you will call the tax office coz I bet they don't pay enough tax [100]; Stuff like threatening to call social services, even if they would never do that. It just keeps them in order I guess [77] |
| Withholding | Making sure they can’t see friends or use their bank account–I bet that is what they do, they stop letting people get to their money? [403]; Removing privileges like going to the cinema and going to restaurants–preventing people from doing stuff and not having any money [397]; Making life really difficult, maybe by not letting them see a doctor [263] |
Percentage responses and means and SDs, in rank order for knowledge of psychologically coercive behaviours (N = 682).
| Mean | Mean | Yes | Don’t | No | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Behaviour | (SD) | Rank | (%) | Know (%) | (%) |
| Verbally pressure another to commit a crime | 1.10(.34) | 3.01 | 626(91.84) | 46(6.72) | 10(1.53) |
| Verbally pressure another to behave against their free will | 1.32(.67) | 3.41 | 540(79.26) | 64(9.43) | 78(11.41) |
| Verbally intimidate another so he/she is no longer able to make decisions | 1.35(.68) | 3.48 | 475(69.73) | 73(10.75) | 134(19.60) |
| Verbally pressure another to behave against their free will by restricting social contact | 1.79(.74) | 3.57 | 374(54.83) | 165(24.22) | 143(21.04) |
| Verbally pressure another to behave against their free will by undermining self confidence | 1.81(.75) | 3.76 | 298(43.63) | 200(29.46) | 184(27.03) |
| Verbally pressure another to behave against their free will by being nice (e.g., buying gifts etc.) | 1.99(.74) | 3.77 | 250(36.61) | 282(41.44) | 150(22.02) |
Percentage responses and means and SDs in rank order for knowledge of drivers of human trafficking (N = 615).
| Reason | Mean | Mean | Yes | Don’t | No |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (SD) | Rank | (%) | Know (%) | (%) | |
| Are adult females trafficked for sexual exploitation | 1.35(.62) | 3.87 | 461(67.91) | 164(24.03) | 57(8.42) |
| Are people trafficked for organ harvesting | 1.38(.66) | 3.92 | 483(70.80) | 129(18.91) | 70(10.30) |
| Does trafficking for sexual exploitation exceed trafficking for labour exploitation | 1.38(.64) | 3.95 | 469(68.81) | 153(22.42) | 60(8.84) |
| Are adult males trafficked for sexual exploitation | 1.41(.61) | 4.03 | 421(61.73) | 192(28.23) | 69(10.13) |
| Are people trafficked for domestic servitude | 1.53(.69) | 4.42 | 304(44.60) | 359(52.64) | 19(2.78) |
| Are female children trafficked for sexual exploitation | 1.55(.55) | 4.62 | 231(33.90) | 353(51.83) | 31(4.52) |
| Are people trafficked to commit crime | 1.67(.57) | 5.01 | 178(26.14) | 231(33.92) | 273(40.01) |
| Are male children trafficked for sexual exploitation | 2.19(.81) | 6.17 | 108(15.82) | 155(22.74) | 419(61.51) |