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Journal Article

Citation

Gerassi LB, Nichols A, Michelson E. J. Hum. Traffick. 2017; 3(4): 285-302.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/23322705.2016.1260345

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Over the last few decades, service providers and community members have organized and created interagency coalitions to address issues of sex trafficking. Such efforts include grassroots and government-funded coalitions, which typically provide education, training, and awareness about sex trafficking and encourage collaboration and coordinated services among community partners. However, the benefits and challenges of such coalitions within local contexts remains understudied. The current study draws from an inductive analysis of 24 interviews with coalition members representing 18 organizations in one Midwestern city whose service populations included those involved in commercial sex through trafficking, exploitation, or sex work.

FINDINGS suggest benefits of coalitions included increased service collaboration and heightened public awareness. Tensions revolved around conflicting viewpoints of commercial sex and competing service populations. Interrelated challenges also involved competition over funding, funding restrictions, and altered funding streams, which resulted in coalition fragmentation. Recommendations for community-based interagency coalitions to replicate benefits and to address tensions and challenges are provided.

Keywords: Human trafficking


Language: en

Keywords

Commercial sexual exploitation; community-based responses; coordinated community responses; interagency coalitions; sex trafficking; sex work

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