2023
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph20054309
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It Happened in the Desert, in Libya and in Italy: Physical and Sexual Violence Experienced by Female Nigerian Victims of Trafficking in Italy

Abstract: Nigerian girls and women constitute a large percentage of African victims of human trafficking in Italy. Extensive research has been conducted on the causes, push-and-pull factors, and the perpetrators in the phenomenon of trafficking Nigerian women and girls into Italy. However, limited data exist on the women and girls’ narratives of their experiences during their migratory journey from Nigeria to Europe. Using data collected through a mixed method, longitudinal design, 31 female Nigerian victims of traffick… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…This study, therefore, aims to illuminate how these Nigerian victims of trafficking experience(d) stigma and sexual stigma during their trajectories, and how they perceive, interpret, and are impacted by those experiences of stigma. This study adds to the limited literature on the narratives of victims of stigma (Sidhom et al, 2014), sexual stigma (Dahal et al, 2015), and Nigerian victims of trafficking (Esposito et al, 2016; Tessitore & Margherita, 2022) who must deal with the lasting consequences of sexual violence while navigating the negative individual and societal perspectives, judgements, and labels (Adeyinka et al, 2023). The central intersectional approach which includes the participants’ identities as female and Black adds complex and integrated layers to their experiences with the understanding that “social positions intersect at the individual level (e.g., race and gender)” (Bauer et al, 2021, p. 2).…”
Section: Human Trafficking Stigma and Labeling Of Nigerian Victimsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This study, therefore, aims to illuminate how these Nigerian victims of trafficking experience(d) stigma and sexual stigma during their trajectories, and how they perceive, interpret, and are impacted by those experiences of stigma. This study adds to the limited literature on the narratives of victims of stigma (Sidhom et al, 2014), sexual stigma (Dahal et al, 2015), and Nigerian victims of trafficking (Esposito et al, 2016; Tessitore & Margherita, 2022) who must deal with the lasting consequences of sexual violence while navigating the negative individual and societal perspectives, judgements, and labels (Adeyinka et al, 2023). The central intersectional approach which includes the participants’ identities as female and Black adds complex and integrated layers to their experiences with the understanding that “social positions intersect at the individual level (e.g., race and gender)” (Bauer et al, 2021, p. 2).…”
Section: Human Trafficking Stigma and Labeling Of Nigerian Victimsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another plausible explanation for this finding could be that wealthy households are reluctant to send women abroad because they consider female migration riskier than that of men. Female migration in Edo is closely associated with sex trafficking and exploitation (Adeyinka et al 2023;Plambech 2022Plambech , 2017Damon et al 2018;Spaggiari 2016;Hyland 2016). Since wealthy households are not in a precarious socioeconomic condition, they might weigh the risks associated with female migration alongside the potential remittances from female migration and decide that the risks outweigh the benefits.…”
Section: International Emigration Plansmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A plausible explanation for this finding is that households allocate more of their resources towards men's emigration plans than those of women. This might be because wealthy households in Edo consider women's migration to be riskier than those of men, especially given women's vulnerability to sex trafficking (Adeyinka et al 2023;Plambech 2022Plambech , 2017Taub 2017;Hyland 2016). Moreover, since wealthy households are not in a precarious socioeconomic condition, they might weigh the risks associated with female migration alongside the potential remittances therefrom and decide that the risks outweigh the benefits.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These women and girls experience different forms of physical and sexual violence during their migration trajectories (Adeyinka et al, 2023a;IOM, 2017;Orsini et al, 2022). Upon arrival in Italy or another European country, they live with and work for a ''madam'' who controls their lives and puts them to work on the streets where they solicit clients (Suuntaus Project, 2015) or, in other cases, they are locked in private homes and forced to attend to clients there.…”
Section: Trafficking Of Nigeriansmentioning
confidence: 99%