Nigerian Migrant Women and Human Trafficking Narratives: Stereotypes, Stigma and Ethnographic Knowledge
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The Anti-Trafficking Narrative
2. About the Method
3. Results
3.1. Financing Strategies
Girls who go to Europe know this is the job. I knew it. But I told my mother I was coming to study. All my brothers are abroad, in Italy and America. My parents gave me the money to come. We are all abroad. If my mother found out, she would kill me. I was asking who I could come with and I found him. My mother didn’t know anything.(Happy,9 September 2003)
I called a woman who told me that the trip was going to cost me more than six million naira [some 26,300 euro]. I went to the bank and asked for the money, with my father. I have already paid for my trip, now I pay the bank in Nigeria six and a half million naira [about 28,500 euro]. I pay every month 300 euros to the bank, but it’s 1000 euro a month. The rest is paid by my father.(Sandra, June 2005)
I had money and then my father would send me [money] on the road when I had no more money. I didn’t spend 30,000 euros like other girls, no! I don’t know how much I spent, but when the money is yours, it’s not that much.(Helen, August 2004)
Working! I pay for everything by working. He earns little money, but pays everything, little by little. Work in Africa, on the road, in Morocco, Roquetas. I pay for the trip with my body, everything, everything.(Florence, November 2006)
I saved my money twice to go through Nador, but they stole it from me both times! I did everything: salam aleykum, I asked my sisters for money, I sold food, I did things that my companions asked me to do… Everything I could!(Destiny, October 2006)
In many places he asks for money on the street to pay for my food, my clothes, Orange card. He asks in the street, from the people. In Mauritania, Algeria and Morocco. Many girls ask everything to their employer. I don’t want to ask for everything, if he asks for everything, you give everything. Always hide your money. They ask: “Do you have money? How do you pay your phone?” Ah, very difficult! Ah!(Mary, October 2004)
3.2. A Smuggling Agents: Variety, Complexity and Ambiguity
Can I tell you the truth? If I tell you the truth, I didn’t care, I knew it. My mother was crying, because I could die in the sea and she told me not to come, too much suffering. My mother told me to wait until she saved money to travel with her money. But I didn’t want to wait, so I looked for someone to help me and I paid.(Blessing, May 2005)
The woman I talked to in Nigeria about coming to Europe told me I would have a good job. And look at the job. Well, huh [with sad irony]. I can’t talk about this with my mother. When I told her, she got sick.(Joy, November 2004)
A lot of kids fall by the wayside and are guide men. They make a living. I had no problem with them. A lot of them are good people, they help you hide, they explain things to you.(Kelly, June 2005)
A lot of girls fuck with guide man because they don’t have money for food. They take care, give food, everything.(Susan, February 2007)
I starts to fuck on the trip. A lot of girls look for a boyfriend on the trip to survive. If you have a boyfriend, nobody touches you. My boyfriend was a guide man.(Joy, February 2005)
Men who carry people fuck girls. She says that if not, she will die because she will not eat and without a boyfriend she cannot survive. A lot of pregnant girls have their child in the desert, no doctor, nothing, nothing.(Costas, March 2008)
Johnson connection is a good man. He helps girls a lot. Connections are necessary and he is a very good person. Others are not. Others take advantage of the girls, because they don’t have power.(Sweet, August 2007)
There are connections that are good people and help the women a lot with their children, calling the doctor, looking for help to go to Europe for less money. Others are much worse because they take advantage of the girls, they cheat them.(Mary, October 2006)
When the girl is in Morocco she has to go to Europe! The boss calls someone and sells you. He says “Do you want a girl for Madrid?” He says what your name is, how old you are, if you have children… everything. And he sells the girl to a madam.(Faith, November 2008)
The boss takes care of you. He accompanies you taking care of you and there are some who take good care of you and others who rape the girls. Many girls become girlfriends of the boss. If he is your boyfriend, he takes better care of you.(Mariama, January 2007)
He’s your boss! If you don’t do everything he tells you to do, he beats you!(Joy, March 2009)
My employer was very good. He protected me from the police and gave me everything I needed. I looked at other girls who were bad and I wasn’t so bad.(Queen, October 2005)
If the madam is a good person, she charges little and just wants to get paid every month. That’s the way it is. If she is a bad woman, she beats you, she asks for more money, always more money. She just wants money and if she wants money fast, she controls you all day long […] she wants you to work as a whore to get paid soon.(Christiana, June 2008)
My madame is a very nice person. She has always treated the girls very well. She charges little and doesn’t look at your cell phone. You just pay your money and she leaves you alone.(Joy, January 2011)
My madame is in Valencia. Now she controls me a lot. I can change jobs, but I have to tell her because I have to pay her every month […]. But she is a good person. She introduced me to everyone here. You can’t do anything if you don’t know people.(Queen, November 2004)
As a whore it is easier, you earn more money and there is always work. Last year I had a boyfriend and he helped me pay my madame every month. I worked as a hairdresser. But as a whore you earn more and I want to pay soon. I want to get it over with now.(Josephine, March 2008)
She takes care of my daughter when I’m working, but that’s why I have to do a lot of things at home. But I have to do it, she helps me, she is my older cousin. That’s why I pay less than other girls and if I don’t pay for a month, nothing happens. But I have to work for her. That’s the way things are in Africa.(Lauryn, October 2006)
I have two bosses. One is in Madrid, but the most important one is in prison in Mali. She will be there for five years. I have to pay her. The one in Madrid controlled my work in Madrid. I wanted to work in a club, but she didn’t want me to be on the street. She wanted me to be on the street. It’s dangerous there! They killed two friends and threw them in the garbage, and my madame didn’t care. She said, “It’s life. That’s why I came to Almeria. Here there are more Nigerians and I don’t work on the street. But I have to pay her every month. If not, she will look for my family, for sure! I want to work and get rid of this problem. I want to pay soon.(Joy, November 2004)
We are under control here. She’s mean, she beats the girls. She keeps the papers and asks for all the money. We work and she takes the money. Then she pays for our food, our clothes, the phone, the cab. Everything.(Becky, June 2004)
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In this regard, the document that compiles the indicators of trafficking agreed upon at the international level is the one published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. See https://www.unodc.org/documents/human-trafficking/HT_indicators_S_LOWRES.pdf (accessed on 13 January 2024). |
2 | https://niunamenos.org.ar/ (accessed on 4 December 2023). |
3 | https://metoomvmt.org/ (accessed on 13 January 2024). |
4 | |
5 | As in Directive 2011/36/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 5 April 2011, https://www.boe.es/doue/2011/101/L00001-00011.pdf (accessed on 28 March 2024). |
6 | www.apdha.org (accessed on 10 January 2024). |
7 | Details of the total ethnographic study data can be found in the full version of the research by following this link https://www.educacion.gob.es/teseo/imprimirFicheroTesis.do?idFichero=CbCsTSdjdgw%3D (accessed on 28 March 2024). |
8 | In the province of Almería, women account for 43.46% of the active population, 41% of Social Security affiliation and only 31% of those affiliated with the Special Agrarian Regime. However, they are 91.76% of those hired for domestic service (Servicio Público de Empleo Estatal 2022). On the other hand, 81.02% of contracts in agriculture were made to foreign men (Servicio Público de Empleo Estatal 2023). |
9 | To ensure the confidentiality of the informant, the names shown here are not real. |
10 | The reality of those who manage to earn some money through these small strategies has also been reported by the UNODC (2011), which describes how migrants stay for long periods of time in places where they manage to earn some money in temporary jobs to obtain resources. These jobs or opportunities arise from contacts established in businesses (bars, inns, etc.), generally set up by women, also migrants, to meet the needs of travelers. |
11 | Women’s Link Worldwide (2014) also spoke of the deterioration of traditional ways of life as a result of colonization processes, the idealization of ways of life in European countries, a discriminatory gender structure for women within the ethno-cultural contexts of origin (in particular, Edo), the sexual violence towards women that results from it, and the normalization of trafficking in their contexts of origin. |
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Acién González, E. Nigerian Migrant Women and Human Trafficking Narratives: Stereotypes, Stigma and Ethnographic Knowledge. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 207. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040207
Acién González E. Nigerian Migrant Women and Human Trafficking Narratives: Stereotypes, Stigma and Ethnographic Knowledge. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(4):207. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040207
Chicago/Turabian StyleAcién González, Estefanía. 2024. "Nigerian Migrant Women and Human Trafficking Narratives: Stereotypes, Stigma and Ethnographic Knowledge" Social Sciences 13, no. 4: 207. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040207
APA StyleAcién González, E. (2024). Nigerian Migrant Women and Human Trafficking Narratives: Stereotypes, Stigma and Ethnographic Knowledge. Social Sciences, 13(4), 207. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040207