Selling Olga

Selling Olga

by Louisa Waugh (Author)

Synopsis

'...But it feels like another war is still being fought here...a war against women. They are trafficked like cargo, and traded like stock; the price for each calculated according to how much profit can be extracted from her afterwards.' Louisa Waugh has spent three years researching and writing this vivid, unflinching investigation into human trafficking across Europe. She journeys to some of the places most infested with trafficking; talking to women who have been trafficked, and the people who support them in defiance of personal risk. She visits Bosnia and Kosovo, where, more than a decade after civil war first erupted across former Yugoslavia, women are still sold in bars and confined inside private apartments; and where the UN and NATO are both finally attempting to address the ugly complicity of their own peacekeepers. She travels to northern Albania, where chronic poverty coerces women into sex work. In Moldova she meets Olga, who tells her own story in angry, heartbreaking detail. But trafficking is not confined to the Balkans. In Sicily she spends time with Nigerian women who were trafficked by other women, and who are now fighting back. These journeys are courageous attempts to understand trafficking in situ; and to investigate why, in spite of global awareness, relentless anti-trafficking campaigns, and increasing numbers of traffickers being imprisoned, this is still the world's fastest-growing organised crime. She also explores human trafficking in Britain; what happens to women sold into our sex industry, and to migrants trapped in other forms of forced labour within our 'ultra flexible labour market'. Finally, Louisa Waugh puts forward a passionate case for why, in spite of everything, there is genuine hope of change.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: Phoenix
Published: 19 Jul 2007

ISBN 10: 0753822067
ISBN 13: 9780753822067
Book Overview: Louisa Waugh's first book HEARING BIRDS FLY won the 2004 Ondaatje Award and was shortlisted for the Thomas Cook Travel Book of the Year Award. The US government estimates between 700,000 and 2 million people are trafficked. Human trafficking is the fastest-growing illegal industry on earth The British Government will be signing a European Convention dealing with slavery this year. 2007 is also the Bicentenary of the Slave Trade Act 'Compelling reading' Sunday Times 'Selling Olga avoids being sensational or prurient ... Waugh argues cogently that victims should receive physical and legal sanctuary' The Independent

Author Bio
Louisa Waugh grew up in Liverpool and spent several years working with homeless young people, before moving to Mongolia where she wrote for the Guardian and Independent and was a regular BBC World Service contributor. SELLING OLGA is her second book, following the award-winning HEARING BIRDS FLY.