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The United States as Global Sheriff: Using Unilateral Sanctions to Combat Human Trafficking

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors examine the US sanctions regime for the fragile new international cooperation framework established under the Palermo Protocol and assess the sanctions regime's capacity to promote progressive development of transnational anti-trafficking norms, and conclude with a modest proposal for improvement.
Abstract
In recent years, the issue of human trafficking - the recruitment or movement of persons by means of coercion or deception into exploitative labor or slavery-like practices - has moved from the margins to the mainstream political agenda The rapid proliferation of international, regional and domestic anti-trafficking laws bespeaks universal condemnation of the practice, but belies deep divisions among States over how to define and approach the problem It is thus significant that the international community was able to reach consensus and conclude a new international law on trafficking - the Palermo Protocol But just weeks before the signing of the Protocol, the United States passed domestic anti-trafficking legislation with unsettling global reach Authorizing unilateral sanctions against countries that fail to meet US minimum standards for eliminating trafficking, the US law provides a ready means for injecting US domestic anti-trafficking norms into the international arena This Article examines the significance of the US sanctions regime for the fragile new international cooperation framework established under the Protocol This Article begins by situating the US rise to dominance in broader historical and political context, describing the controversies that plagued development of the Protocol and continue to influence US trafficking policy The Article then examines critiques of US unilateralism through the lens of international law, and derives a critical framework for assessing the US sanctions regime Having established context and methodology, the Article assesses the sanctions regime's capacity to promote progressive development of transnational anti-trafficking norms, and concludes with a modest proposal for improvement

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