Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Report
Document cover
ShareSHARE

Gender, technology and trafficking in persons: women’s experiences of forced criminality in South‑East Asia’s cyber‑scam centres

Publisher
Crime prevention Cyber-crime Financial crime Fraud Human trafficking Victims of crimes Gender-based violence Southeast Asia
Resources
Description

Over the past decade, cyber-scam centres dedicated to running online scams at a massive scale have proliferated across areas of South-East Asia, partly fuelled by a workforce of persons who have been trafficked for the purpose of forced criminality. Alongside the scams, which affect victims globally, these centres themselves have become sites of significant exploitation. Historically, women and girls constitute the majority of victim-survivors of trafficking overall, but the extent to which gender shapes pathways into, and experiences of, exploitation in this context is only beginning to be explored.

To understand women and girls’ experiences of trafficking into cyber-scam centres for forced criminality, the research involved qualitative consultations with 86 stakeholders in the South East Asian region and in-depth interviews with three victim-survivors.

Women and girls are predominantly recruited into cyber-scam centres through someone they know, using strategies that exploit relational trust. Women in cyber-scam centres commonly experience compounded forms of exploitation, most often forced criminality (online scamming) as well as sexual exploitation. Sex work, threats and extreme forms of violence are routine control mechanisms used by criminal organisations to make people of all genders perform and conform in this environment.

Gender-responsive approaches are imperative for addressing the complex and multiple forms of exploitation that women experience while inside cyber-scam centres and post-release. Recommendations are made for developing gendered awareness campaigns, trauma-informed victim identification processes and aftercare, and strengthening partnerships across the region.

Publication Details
DOI:
10.52922/sp78274
ISBN:
9781922878274
License type:
CC BY
Access Rights Type:
open