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Providing Protection or Enabling Exploitation? Orphanages and Modern Slavery in Post-Disaster Contexts
Author(s) -
Kathryn van Doore,
Rebecca Nhep
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of modern slavery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2574-9897
DOI - 10.22150/jms/stcb4140
Subject(s) - harm , criminology , political science , narrative , economic growth , sociology , law , art , economics , literature
Orphanages are a common child protection response to humanitarian crises spurred on by media and NGO depictions of the disaster orphan. Yet, decades of research attests to the harm that orphanage care can cause. Driven by aid funding, orphanages are often sustained long after the recovery phase. In recent years, research has highlighted the links between orphanages, exploitation and modern slavery, particularly orphanage trafficking. This paper examines how the perpetuation of the disaster narrative sustains orphanage care post-disaster which heightens the risk, and exposure, of children to modern slavery, and makes suggestions for strengthening humanitarian crises responses to protect children.

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