What is it about?

The study explores institutional design strategies that promote compliance by regulating peculiar sorts of agents, namely, human trafficking victims. Institutions assume addressee virtue, but instead should consider the hypothesis of non-compliance or that the measures adopted reveal their inefficiency to satisfy the goals they were thought for, or that they are applied to obtain scopes, which are different from the ones they were conceived for. Different methodological approaches, both deductive and inductive, are combined in the present paper, together with comparative and philosophical insights on national court decisions, scholarly writings, national and international entities’ official reports and statistics.

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Why is it important?

EU member states’ experts are discussing about common guidelines, policies and standards to manage migration fluxes and EU integration process. This study highlights some critical points arising from the specific condition of a peculiar human trafficking victim: a migrant.

Perspectives

The paper offers insights into the possible answers in terms of awarding prize to and humanitarian protection of victims to fight human trafficking and smuggling in a constructive way, emphasising that (awarding and humanitarian) instruments are not mutually exclusive and can be mixed together.

Professor Alessandra Pera
University of Palermo

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: The residence permit for third-country nationals who are victims of human trafficking, Journal of Financial Crime, May 2017, Emerald,
DOI: 10.1108/jfc-02-2016-0014.
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Contributors

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