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Accepted Paper:

"The Slave Next Door": Domestic service, trafficking asylum claims, and the persistence of coercion in West Africa  
Benjamin Lawrance (University of Arizona)

Paper short abstract:

In The Slave Next Door (2010), Bales and Soodalter exposed trafficking and slavery in the US. This paper compares strategies of contemporary West African urban slave resistance, namely asylum-seeking abroad and domestic legal recourse to better understand the lived experience of urban slaves.

Paper long abstract:

In The Slave Next Door (California, 2010), Kevin Bales and Ron Soodalter exposed the disturbing phenomenon of human trafficking and slavery in the United States. They identified slaves hidden in plain sight, such as dishwashers in neighborhood restaurants, street hawkers selling trinkets, and janitors cleaning department stores, and celebrated their rescue, liberation, and reintegration into society. Contemporary West African urban enslavement parallels many of the insights of Bales and Soodalter, but lesser legal and socio-structural support for rescue and recovery gives rise to innovative strategies. West African trafficking not simply a new form of slavery, but rather a complex multivalent and multi-sited process (Anderson and O'Connell Davidson, 2003), and exit strategies are tightly controlled (Fernandez 2014; O'Connell Davidson 2015). Some urban slaves subject themselves to smuggling networks, or subordinate themselves to traffickers and seek asylum beyond the sub-region (Lawrance 2017). But the majority of trafficking victims have no alternative but to remain in West Africa, and employ a combination of personal, legal, economic, and social strategies to terminate or renegotiate relationships of coercion. This paper compares two alternative strategies of contemporary urban slave resistance in West Africa, namely asylum-seeking abroad and domestic legal recourse at home to better understand the lived experience of urban slaves. Asylum testimonies and published accounts of domestic trafficking prosecutions from several West African countries provide rich details of physical, emotional, and sexual exploitation shedding light on the underbelly of the increasingly globalized economy in sprawling African urban conglomerations.

Panel P102
Urban elites and the legacies of slavery
  Session 1