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Women's experiences of human trafficking and their conceptualisations and requirements of 'support'

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TLDR
This paper explored women's experiences of Human Trafficking and their understandings of the term "support" in light of these, and argued that clinical psychology needs to fulfil its legislative duty to address the health of survivors of human trafficking within a human rights and violence against women framework.
Abstract
This research explores women’s experiences of Human Trafficking (HT) and their understandings of the term ‘support’ in light of these. It explores what type of support they saw as being useful to them given their experiences. This study was necessary and timely given the publication of the 2015 National Referral Mechanism (NRM), the UK policy to protect survivors of HT, which requires services to provide medical, legal and psychological ‘support’ to survivors. It has been argued that these services can be limited, particularly psychology, given that they are built on professional conceptualisations of what is necessary and useful and neglect a survivor’s perspective. The study involved in-depth interviews with sixteen survivors of HT who were all within the NRM. Interviews were analysed using thematic analysis from a critical realist epistemology within a realist ontology. Three main themes were identified. Theme One encompassed participants’ grounding their understanding of ‘support’ in the context of their experiences of HT. Multiple intersecting forms of inequality and discrimination and the deceptive nature of HT were highlighted. Theme Two involved participants’ accounts of both the injuries sustained from their experiences of HT and those perpetuated by their current experiences in the NRM. The third theme related to participants’ hope that their experience of multiple injustice could be realised, recognised and understood in order to prevent and protect themselves and others from further harm. Based on the analysis, implications for future research, policy and practice are considered. This research argues that clinical psychology needs to fulfil its legislative duty to address the health of survivors of HT within a human rights and violence against women framework

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Trauma and Recovery: The Aftermath of Violence — from Domestic Abuse to Political Terror

TL;DR: Shattered Assumptions: Toward a New Psychology of Trauma, Ronnie Janoff-Bulman as mentioned in this paper, 256 pp. ISBN 0-02-916015-4.Trauma and Recovery: The Aftermath of Violence from Domestic Abuse to Political Terror, Judith Lewis Herman. New York: Basic Books, 1992.

International human rights

TL;DR: The United States was one of only seven states to vote against the Rome Statute, but President Clinton had the United States sign the treaty on the eve of his departure from office.
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Injustice: why social inequality still persists

TL;DR: This is a necessary revised edition of the 2010 original, given widening inequality (primarily in the UK but also the US) in the last five years as mentioned in this paper, and the growth in stratification with respect to income inequality.
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Retelling the Stories of our Lives: Everyday Narrative Therapy to Draw Inspiration and Transform Experience.

TL;DR: In Retelling the Stories of our lives: Everyday Narrative Therapy to Draw Inspiration and Transform Experience, David Denborough presents a well written, detailed and easy to follow account of an alternative form of psychotherapy.
References
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Using thematic analysis in psychology

TL;DR: Thematic analysis is a poorly demarcated, rarely acknowledged, yet widely used qualitative analytic method within psychology as mentioned in this paper, and it offers an accessible and theoretically flexible approach to analysing qualitative data.
Book

A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance

TL;DR: Cognitive dissonance theory links actions and attitudes as discussed by the authors, which holds that dissonance is experienced whenever one cognition that a person holds follows from the opposite of at least one other cognition that the person holds.
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Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity.

Melvin L. DeFleur, +1 more
- 01 Oct 1964 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the relationship between information control and personal identity, including the Discredited and the Discreditable Social Information Visibility Personal Identity Biography Biographical Others Passing Techniques of Information Control Covering.
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Thematic Analysis: Striving to Meet the Trustworthiness Criteria

TL;DR: The process of conducting a thematic analysis is illustrated through the presentation of an auditable decision trail, guiding interpreting and representing textual data and exploring issues of rigor and trustworthiness.