RT Article T1 Human trafficking policies in Scandinavia: what happens when international obligations meet national problem definitions? JF New forms of human trafficking SP 75 OP 91 A1 Skilbrei, May-Len LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1895386985 AB This chapter presents a demonstration and discussion of various shifts in how Denmark, Norway and Sweden have approached human trafficking since the inception of the UN Trafficking Protocol in 2000. While the policy domain of human trafficking is framed by this international instrument, the formulation and implementation of concrete policies stem from national and local institutions and problem definitions. To investigate the relationship between international obligations and national implementation, this chapter examines how the problem of trafficking appears in presentations of trafficking. The chapter also examines how that definition has changed over time in governmental white papers and statements. The chapter identifies commonalities in the trajectories of the three countries’ trafficking policies, all of which have reproduced a bias towards prostitution-related trafficking and female victims. This outlook must be understood both in light of the existence of such biases in international policy frameworks as well as how domestic debates on prostitution have affected the policy domain of trafficking. In all three countries, the policy domain of trafficking is also intermingled with concerns about migration, which has had consequences for the countries’ abilities to identify and assist victims. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 88-91 SN 9783031397318 K1 Vereinte Nationen K1 Menschenhandel K1 Gesetz K1 Skandinavien DO 10.1007/978-3-031-39732-5_5