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Journal Article

Citation

Bourgeois R. UCLA Law Rev. 2015; 62(6): 1426-1463.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, UCLA Law)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This Article argues that because of its historical and ongoing investments in settler colonialism, the Canadian state has long been complicit and continues to be complicit in the human trafficking of indigenous women and girls in Canada. In addition to providing indigenous bodies for labour and sexual exploitation, Canada's trafficking of indigenous people has been essential not only to securing the indigenous lands required for the nation's existence, but also in facilitating the speedy colonial elimination of indigenous people whether through assimilation, forced emancipation, or death. Human trafficking, as such, has been essential to securing domination of indigenous peoples and territories throughout Canadian colonial history. This Article pays particular attention to the Canadian state's uses of law to enable the trafficking of indigenous women and girls (and indigenous peoples, generally).

Keywords: Human trafficking


Language: en

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