Measuring the immeasurable: Understanding the effectiveness of anti-child trafficking transnational advocacy networks
Measuring the immeasurable: Understanding the effectiveness of anti-child trafficking transnational advocacy networks
Transnational advocacy networks’ anti-child trafficking efforts have led to significant progress in the Mekong Subregion by bringing the child trafficking issue onto the global social policy agenda, resulting in new child protection legislation and improved inter-agency collaboration in the region. However, a significant gap in both the literature on TANs and TAN practice is the lack of monitoring and evaluation of TAN ‘effectiveness’. This article discusses the recent literature on TAN effectiveness and discusses the ‘key elements’ of TAN effectiveness, as highlighted by child trafficking experts operating in TANs in the Greater Mekong Subregion. Research into the area of TAN effectiveness is important for improving our knowledge of what TANs are achieving in terms of preventing child trafficking and protecting victims, as well as improving our knowledge of the different meanings and interpretations of TAN ‘effectiveness’. Furthermore, research into this area is important for improving our understanding of how TANs are well positioned to provide an effective response to the child sex trafficking problem.
Davy, Deanna
f19cfbfe-1b22-4e66-b9d1-a816d0b64e58
5 August 2013
Davy, Deanna
f19cfbfe-1b22-4e66-b9d1-a816d0b64e58
Davy, Deanna
(2013)
Measuring the immeasurable: Understanding the effectiveness of anti-child trafficking transnational advocacy networks.
Cosmopolitan Civil Societies, 5 (2).
(doi:10.5130/ccs.v5i2.3102).
Abstract
Transnational advocacy networks’ anti-child trafficking efforts have led to significant progress in the Mekong Subregion by bringing the child trafficking issue onto the global social policy agenda, resulting in new child protection legislation and improved inter-agency collaboration in the region. However, a significant gap in both the literature on TANs and TAN practice is the lack of monitoring and evaluation of TAN ‘effectiveness’. This article discusses the recent literature on TAN effectiveness and discusses the ‘key elements’ of TAN effectiveness, as highlighted by child trafficking experts operating in TANs in the Greater Mekong Subregion. Research into the area of TAN effectiveness is important for improving our knowledge of what TANs are achieving in terms of preventing child trafficking and protecting victims, as well as improving our knowledge of the different meanings and interpretations of TAN ‘effectiveness’. Furthermore, research into this area is important for improving our understanding of how TANs are well positioned to provide an effective response to the child sex trafficking problem.
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Published date: 5 August 2013
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Local EPrints ID: 506515
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506515
PURE UUID: f703710f-f218-4138-8f16-3aed4b81e8a1
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Last modified: 12 Nov 2025 03:10
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Deanna Davy
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