RT Article T1 Demanding reduction: a county-level analysis examining structural determinants of human trafficking arrests in Florida JF Crime & delinquency VO 68 IS 1 SP 28 OP 51 A1 Diaz, Madelyn A2 Huff-Corzine, Lin A2 Corzine, Jay LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1785997939 AB Academic literature has placed increased focus on understanding the complexities of human trafficking cases, but a gap in literature persists on assessing structural determinants that may impact the number of identified human trafficking arrests. As such, using administrative data on human trafficking arrests from 2013 to 2017, in the present study we examine the influence that macro-level social disorganization indicators, physical characteristics, and criminality rates have on human trafficking arrests in the state of Florida. Results reveal that counties with a higher number of human trafficking arrests were associated with higher levels of residential instability, a greater count of police agencies, as well as, lower levels of concentrated disadvantage and drug arrest rates. We close with directions for future research and anti-trafficking policy recommendations. K1 Human Trafficking K1 Arrests K1 Florida DO 10.1177/0011128720962710