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A New Frontier: Human Trafficking and ISIS’s Recruitment of Women From the West

2015, A. Binetti, Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security, A New Frontier: Human Trafficking and ISIS’s Recruitment of Women From the West
Type
Report
Country
Syrian Arab Republic (the)
Region
Middle East and North Africa
Organization
Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security
Year
2015
Authors
A. Binetti

Human trafficking is an effective tool that serves several purposes for terrorist organizations. It facilitates the recruitment and retention of male foreign fighters and provides a reward mechanism for successful combatants.It also generates revenue and contributes to psychologically crushing “the enemy,” by “decimat[ing] communities”.Trafficking, as a tactic of warfare, “intimidates populations and reduces resistance just as enslavement and rape of women.”While it is well-understood that ISIS’s kidnapping and enslavement of Yazidi women and other female prisoners constitutes human trafficking, less attention has been paid to the prospect that some of ISIS’s female recruits from the West, who average 18 years of age 5, may also be considered victims of entrapment and trafficking because of the techniques used to lure these young women and how they are exploited upon arrival in ISIS-held territory.