TY - JOUR
T1 - Politics without principle
T2 - potential borders and the ethics of anti-trafficking online
AU - Mendel, Jonathan
AU - Sharapov, Kiril
N1 - © The Author(s) 2024
PY - 2024/10/11
Y1 - 2024/10/11
N2 - Anti-trafficking has been spreading in a novel way, with moral certitude (where human trafficking is deemed uniquely wrong, and this wrongness is taken as a founding principle for anti-trafficking action) accompanied by little or no accountability. This moral certitude drives anti-trafficking networks to spread across borders, just as it is assumed that trafficking will. The paper critiques this certitude and spread of anti-trafficking by developing ideas around borders, potential, and ethics. Massumi (2007) analyses the move to a potential politics, which prioritises what “[c]ould have, would have” happened and acts against this potential as if it is a ground for certitude. After Massumi, this paper argues that online anti-trafficking practice relies on potential borders: borders between legal and illegal, and the borders between states, are increasingly blurred by action against what might potentially be trafficking. Following Campbell (1993: 3-4) we critique the claims to “moral certitude” and principle in anti-trafficking and argue for deeper ethical engagement with the needs of others. Against the spread of anti-trafficking through potential borders, we argue that exploitation should be challenged through an ethical response to those marginalised by capitalism today. Against the unprincipled politics of the anti-trafficking industry, we advance a politics without principle that foregrounds our ethical obligation to respond to others.
AB - Anti-trafficking has been spreading in a novel way, with moral certitude (where human trafficking is deemed uniquely wrong, and this wrongness is taken as a founding principle for anti-trafficking action) accompanied by little or no accountability. This moral certitude drives anti-trafficking networks to spread across borders, just as it is assumed that trafficking will. The paper critiques this certitude and spread of anti-trafficking by developing ideas around borders, potential, and ethics. Massumi (2007) analyses the move to a potential politics, which prioritises what “[c]ould have, would have” happened and acts against this potential as if it is a ground for certitude. After Massumi, this paper argues that online anti-trafficking practice relies on potential borders: borders between legal and illegal, and the borders between states, are increasingly blurred by action against what might potentially be trafficking. Following Campbell (1993: 3-4) we critique the claims to “moral certitude” and principle in anti-trafficking and argue for deeper ethical engagement with the needs of others. Against the spread of anti-trafficking through potential borders, we argue that exploitation should be challenged through an ethical response to those marginalised by capitalism today. Against the unprincipled politics of the anti-trafficking industry, we advance a politics without principle that foregrounds our ethical obligation to respond to others.
KW - Trafficking
KW - borders
KW - anti-trafficking
KW - FOSTA-SESTA
U2 - 10.1177/23996544241288682
DO - 10.1177/23996544241288682
M3 - Article
SN - 2399-6544
JO - Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
JF - Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
ER -