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The Placeness of Sex Trafficking—Instilling Consciousness Through Minnesota's Experience
Author(s) -
Hadjiyanni Tasoulla,
Povlitzki Melanie,
Preble Hannah
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of interior design
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.229
H-Index - 13
eISSN - 1939-1668
pISSN - 1071-7641
DOI - 10.1111/joid.12019
Subject(s) - sex trafficking , scholarship , consciousness , space (punctuation) , public relations , cyberspace , state (computer science) , call to action , discipline , political science , action (physics) , sociology , public space , criminology , engineering , human trafficking , psychology , advertising , social science , business , law , computer science , the internet , algorithm , architectural engineering , world wide web , operating system , neuroscience , quantum mechanics , physics
ABSTRACT Collaboration has long been lauded as an effective means of bringing about change. In the case of sex trafficking, one of the greatest social ills of our time, collaborations with designers can shed light on the ways that sex trafficking remains hidden from public consciousness thereby allowing it to proliferate. By joining forces with others working to end trafficking in Minnesota, we explore the types of places implicated in sex trafficking and the potential role of design solutions, adding new dimensions to dialogues that call for an end to modern‐is a call to action. In these efforts, we immerse interior design scholarship, pedagogies, and practice in the placeness of trafficking. “Placeness” connotes the state of being tied to a place, a physical space with material and social/behavioral qualities. We use a Multi‐Disciplinary, Multi‐Sectoral, Collaborative Engagement approach to unravel the mysteries surrounding the placeness of sex trafficking. This required a synthesis of interdisciplinary knowledge and collaboration with other university units, as well as close work with local institutions, organizations, and community members. Our team visited places identified by our collaborators that allowed us to experience them firsthand and begin to narrow down the design parameters that might make these specific spaces amenable to trafficking. Findings point to sex trafficking of women and girls in Minnesota happening everywhere around us: from cyberspace to hotel rooms and bathrooms in transit spaces, from public to private places, from the obvious to the unexpected. Design parameters we identified as conducive to trafficking or not, include space planning, color choices, and code regulations. Attention to design opportunities that emerge through collaborative energies can build consciousness and position design as a medium for social justice.