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      Human smuggling and violence in the east Mediterranean

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          – The purpose of this paper is to outline a typology of violent acts used against migrants using human smugglers. This paper relates the experiences of violence, coercion, and exploitation to migrants’ experiences of being smuggled across borders.

          Design/methodology/approach

          – Data were collected using participant observation and semi-structured interviews among undocumented migrants and refugees who used human smugglers to enter Turkey and Greece. Fieldwork was conducted in Athens, Greece and Istanbul, Turkey over spring and summer 2011 and 2012.

          Findings

          – This paper presents an adapted typology of violence using four categories of coercive violence: threats and pressure, physical force, deception and fraud, and coercion/advantage taking. Movement with human smugglers may involve the violation of consent and forms of exploitation resembling, but not equating to, human trafficking.

          Research limitations/implications

          – The findings are based on a non-probability snowball sample, and are not generalizable. Further research should engage with other methods such as respondent driven sampling to gain more accurate estimates of violent events among smuggled migrants.

          Practical implications

          – Governments must respond appropriately when apprehending or detaining migrants, as many of them have been victimized by violence and may remain vulnerable because of continued threats from human smugglers.

          Originality/value

          – This paper presents a typology of violent acts against migrants using human smugglers, and can be used to develop further research and improve professional practice.

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          Most cited references20

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          Sampling and Estimation in Hidden Populations Using Respondent-Driven Sampling

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            Death at the Border: Efficacy and Unintended Consequences of US Immigration Control Policy

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              • Article: not found

              The dual imperative in refugee research: some methodological and ethical considerations in social science research on forced migration.

              Social scientists doing fieldwork in humanitarian situations often face a dual imperative: research should be both academically sound and policy relevant. We argue that much of the current research on forced migration is based on unsound methodology, and that the data and subsequent policy conclusions are often flawed or ethically suspect. This paper identifies some key methodological and ethical problems confronting social scientists studying forced migrants or their hosts. These problems include non-representativeness and bias, issues arising from working in unfamiliar contexts including translation and the use of local researchers, and ethical dilemmas including security and confidentiality issues and whether researchers are doing enough to 'do no harm'. The second part of the paper reviews the authors' own efforts to conduct research on urban refugees in Johannesburg. It concludes that while there is no single 'best practice' for refugee research, refugee studies would advance its academic and policy relevance by more seriously considering methodological and ethical concerns.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                IJMHSC
                10.1108/IJMHSC
                International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care
                Emerald Publishing
                1747-9894
                9 September 2014
                9 September 2014
                : 10
                : 3
                : 121-133
                Affiliations
                Post-Doc, based at the Department of Migration Law, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                Article
                IJMHSC-06-2013-0010.pdf
                10.1108/IJMHSC-06-2013-0010
                f41d2693-050f-4e32-88cf-8b96bca43179
                © Emerald Group Publishing Limited
                History
                Categories
                Articles
                Research paper
                Health & social care
                Sociology
                Sociology
                Sociology
                Sociology
                Vulnerable groups
                Race & ethnic studies
                Race & ethnic studies
                Race & ethnic studies
                Work, economy & organizations
                Inequalities & diverse/minority groups
                Minorities
                Multiculturalism
                Racial identity
                Labour movements
                Custom metadata
                yes
                yes
                JOURNAL
                included

                Violence,Undocumented migrants,Greece,Human trafficking,Human smuggling,Turkey

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