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Journal Article

Citation

Yoo E, Boyle EH. Law Soc. Inq. 2015; 40(3): 631-663.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, American Bar Foundation, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/lsi.12115

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The implementation of criminal law involves formal law enforcement, education, and public outreach aimed at preventing criminal activity and providing services for victims. Historically, quantitative research on global trends has focused on a single policy dimension, potentially masking the unique factors that affect the diffusion of each policy dimension independently. Using an ordered-probit model to analyze new human trafficking policy data on national prosecution, prevention, and victim-protection efforts, we find that global ties and domestic interest groups matter more where international law is less defined. Although prosecution, mandated by the Trafficking Protocol, was relatively impervious to global ties and domestic interest groups, both trafficking prevention and victim protection were associated with these factors. Our findings also suggest that fear of repercussions is not a major driver of state actions to combat traffickingneither ratification of the protocol nor levels of US aid were associated with greater implementation of antitrafficking measures.


Language: en

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