SWOP Behind Bars Advocacy from the Margins
This is one of the least examined dynamics inside both anti-trafficking spaces and mainstream institutional feminism: the deep, largely unspoken investment in what might be called the "perfect survivor." It shapes which voices get amplified, which stories get funded, which people get invited to speak at conferences, and which ones get managed quietly in the background. It determines who counts as credible, who counts as a liability, and who gets to define what harm looks like and what justice requires. The perfect survivor is sympathetic, compliant, non-threatening, and legible. Their story follows a familiar and emotionally satisfying script. There are clear villains. Clear victims. Clear heroes. The arc moves from suffering toward rescue, and from rescue toward gratitude. The narrative confirms existing institutional frameworks rather than challenging them, leaving the audience with the sense that the systems in place are fundamentally working, perhaps imperfectly, but working. Most importantly, the perfect survivor does not complicate policy conversations. They do not question policing or suggest that law enforcement made their situation worse. They do not criticize the nonprofits claiming to serve them. They do not raise labor rights or economic autonomy as relevant frameworks. They do not acknowledge the agency, improvisation, or survival strategies that kept them alive in ways institutions might find uncomfortable to discuss. And they definitely do not suggest that certain forms of criminalization - the very forms many of those same institutions support - made their lives harder rather than safer.
95 episodios
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