Family-Based Non-State Torturers who Traffic Their Daughters: Praxis and Healing Epiphanies

This is a praxis-based chapter with a feminist human rights lens. Drawing on the authors’ knowledge-based experiences, it explains that women and girls are subjected to torture and human trafficking by non-State actors in the domestic private sphere. The chapter begins by defining non-State torture and that women tell of being born into family-based systems that also trafficked them. Validating the credibility and reliability of women’s disclosures is derived from research examining the online Internet sexualized victimization and torture of children. A family-based typology is outlined, conceptualizing these perpetrators are foremost torturers who traffic versus traffickers who torture. Three principles of non-State torture victimization-traumatization informed care utilizing models developed by authors Jeanne Sarson and Linda MacDonald who have, since 1993, supported women’s healing recovery of their relationship with Self. Their observations are explained sharing intervention models. Author Elizabeth Gordon writes of her recovery from non-State torture human trafficking ordeals beginning in infancy, sharing drawings and art forms that describe three major epiphanies of her recovery. Best practice suggestions close the chapter.

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Family-Controlled Trafficking in the United States: Victim Characteristics, System Response, and Case Outcomes

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This Happened to Me: A Reckoning by Kate Price