A Cross-cultural Comparison of Perceptions Regarding Human Trafficking

Article ID

1N2LZ

A Cross-cultural Comparison of Perceptions Regarding Human Trafficking

Palapan Kampan
Palapan Kampan King Faisal University
Adam Tanielian
Adam Tanielian
Sangthong Tanielian
Sangthong Tanielian
DOI

Abstract

This study surveyed 135 individuals, of which 68 were native speakers of English and 67 were native speakers of Thai. Respondents answered questions on issues related to human trafficking, its causes, and potential solutions. Statistical tests showed significant variance in opinions between language and other groups regarding factors associated with trafficking, and regarding the potential impacts of legalization of prostitution. Thai responses reflected collectivist cultural perceptions while English responses reflected more individualistic views. Males and English speakers were most likely to think legalized prostitution would lead to a reduction in human trafficking while females and Thais were most likely to believe legalized prostitution would increase trafficking. Responses to an open-ended question showed participants felt similarly about potential remedies for human trafficking, including information and awareness campaigns, interaction between civilians and police, increased penalties for offenders, and reduction in macro-environmental variables such as poverty.

A Cross-cultural Comparison of Perceptions Regarding Human Trafficking

This study surveyed 135 individuals, of which 68 were native speakers of English and 67 were native speakers of Thai. Respondents answered questions on issues related to human trafficking, its causes, and potential solutions. Statistical tests showed significant variance in opinions between language and other groups regarding factors associated with trafficking, and regarding the potential impacts of legalization of prostitution. Thai responses reflected collectivist cultural perceptions while English responses reflected more individualistic views. Males and English speakers were most likely to think legalized prostitution would lead to a reduction in human trafficking while females and Thais were most likely to believe legalized prostitution would increase trafficking. Responses to an open-ended question showed participants felt similarly about potential remedies for human trafficking, including information and awareness campaigns, interaction between civilians and police, increased penalties for offenders, and reduction in macro-environmental variables such as poverty.

Palapan Kampan
Palapan Kampan King Faisal University
Adam Tanielian
Adam Tanielian
Sangthong Tanielian
Sangthong Tanielian

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Palapan Kampan. 2019. “. Global Journal of Human-Social Science – H: Interdisciplinary GJHSS-H Volume 19 (GJHSS Volume 19 Issue H1): .

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Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/GJHSS

Print ISSN 0975-587X

e-ISSN 2249-460X

Issue Cover
GJHSS Volume 19 Issue H1
Pg. 21- 36
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GJHSS-H Classification: FOR Code: 200299
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A Cross-cultural Comparison of Perceptions Regarding Human Trafficking

Palapan Kampan
Palapan Kampan King Faisal University
Adam Tanielian
Adam Tanielian
Sangthong Tanielian
Sangthong Tanielian

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