BibliOpen logo
Search icon
Cover unavailable
The Banality of Good: The UN's Global Fight against Human Trafficking
The Banality of Good: The UN's Global Fight against Human Trafficking

by Lieba Faier

Duke University Press, 2024

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-1-4780-2629-7

Paper: 978-1-4780-3056-0

eISBN: 978-1-4780-9407-4 (OA)

eISBN: 978-1-4780-5952-3 (standard)

About the Book
In The Banality of Good, Lieba Faier examines why contemporary efforts to curb human trafficking have fallen so spectacularly short of their stated goals despite well-funded campaigns by the United Nations and its member-state governments. Focusing on Japan’s efforts to enact the UN’s counter-trafficking protocol and assist Filipina migrants working in Japan’s sex industry, Faier draws from interviews with NGO caseworkers and government officials to demonstrate how these efforts disregard the needs and perspectives of those they are designed to help. She finds that these campaigns tend to privilege bureaucracies and institutional compliance, resulting in the compromised quality of life, repatriation, and even criminalization of human trafficking survivors. Faier expands on Hannah Arendt’s idea of the “banality of evil” by coining the titular “banality of good” to describe the reality of the UN’s fight against human trafficking. Detailing the protocols that have been put in place and evaluating their enactment, Faier reveals how the continued failure of humanitarian institutions to address structural inequities and colonial history ultimately reinforces the violent status quo they claim to be working to change.
About the Author
Lieba Faier is Professor of Geography and Gender Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, and author of Intimate Encounters: Filipina Women and the Remaking of Rural Japan.
Reviews
“A profound and vivid account of the afterlives of well-intended protocols and laws that are not able to resolve the very aspirations that embed their core mandates. By making plain the relationship between ‘do good aspirations,’ global political economy, inept legal tools, and the contradictions inherent in international justice, The Banality of Good offers new clarity on why human trafficking persists today. Truly a tour de force. A must-read!”

-- Kamari Maxine Clarke, author of Affective Justice: The International Criminal Court and the Pan-Africanist Pushback

“This is a significant contribution to studies of international law and policy with a critical and on-the-ground granular approach to deepening our understanding of how anti-trafficking practices may be received and modified in local communities. Lieba Faier argues that contemporary models of global governance that propose universal solutions should include local thinking about trafficking. By training our eye on the nuances of human trafficking, Faier demonstrates, we would produce more layered understandings of the conditions that produce the violence in the first place and allow for the possibility of making material changes in the lives of victims.”

-- Arzoo Osanloo, author of Forgiveness Work: Mercy, Law, and Victims’ Rights in Iran

"This excellent, meticulously detailed book successfully highlights the complexities and pragmatic pitfalls of implementing international law to effect significant change. It is a must-read volume for those interested in international law, global governance, human trafficking, and sex trafficking. Essential."
-- V. Collins Choice

"Anyone frustrated with the politics surrounding human trafficking interventions will welcome this new study ... In this thorough and highly detailed book, the author provides both historical-archival and much-needed on-the-ground ethnographic research examining the development of the international Trafficking Protocol, adopted by the United Nations in 2000, and how it has operated in the cases of Japan and the Philippines."
-- Edward Snajdr Journal of Anthropological Research

"Leiba Faier’s The Banality of Good offers a sharp, ethnographic autopsy of the global counter-human trafficking machine. Rooted in years of frontline volunteer work, Faier’s analysis cuts through the rhetoric of international policy to expose the friction between competing layers of the system."
-- Patricia Ho Journal of Urban Affairs

Tags
Human trafficking, Banality, Human trafficking victims, Protocols etc, Asian Studies, Government policy, Japan, Gender Studies, Cultural & Social, Anthropology, Cultural & Ethnic Studies, Social Science
Open Access Information

Label: UCLA

License: CC BY-NC 4.0