Tráfico Internacional de Mulheres: A Rota Natasha e o Complexo de Segurança Europeu

Authors

  • Áurea Araújo Camargo Pinheiro
  • Emilly Emanuelle Guidi Ribeiro
  • Juliane Bruna da Silva PUC Minas
  • Júlia Carvalho Teixeira
  • Maria Eugênia Nogueira Jones Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Minas Gerais
  • Samantha Argento Zubelli de Assumpção

Abstract

The study in question is an analysis referring to prostitution networks, currently seen as a transnational problem that directly affects the safety of individuals and, mainly, women. The purpose of this article is to use the Natasha Route as an instrument to think about the conditions to which women are subjected and how this is configured as a human security problem. Besides, we aim to identify how the States act in relation to this problem, considering that this is a practice that is not restricted to the national scope. From this, it is seen how Europe is a security complex that, due to the geographical proximity of its participants, makes the majority of European countries and their surroundings have to seek solutions together, considering that this problem ramifies for their neighbors. Therefore, we sought to analyze, especially in the case of the Natasha Route, how the European security complex can articulate itself to deal with this security problem that affects women victims of prostitution networks.

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Author Biography

Juliane Bruna da Silva, PUC Minas

 

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Published

2024-07-10

How to Cite

Araújo Camargo Pinheiro, Áurea ., Emanuelle Guidi Ribeiro, E. ., da Silva, J. B., Carvalho Teixeira, J. ., Nogueira Jones, M. E., & Argento Zubelli de Assumpção, S. . (2024). Tráfico Internacional de Mulheres: A Rota Natasha e o Complexo de Segurança Europeu. Fronteira: Revista De iniciação científica Em Relações Internacionais, 22(43), 80–96. Retrieved from https://periodicos.pucminas.br/fronteira/article/view/25582