Abstract
Trafficking of foreign women into China for forced marriage, once unheard of in China, has ceased to surprise the general public with frequent news stories about women from Vietnam, Myanmar, and North Korea being deceived and sold as brides into the interior of China. Using data extracted from official sources in the Chinese judicial system, we analyzed a total of 73 court cases involving 184 Myanmar women who were trafficked into China, spanning a period of 13 years (2003 through 2016). We found people of diverse backgrounds participated in the trafficking business, most were of low education and unemployed or underemployed. Little formal organizational structures appeared to be needed in these trafficking activities. The vast majority of traffickers were Chinese nationals, who seemed well-connected with the cross-border trade as well as traditional matchmaking business. Most trafficking occurred under the guise of employment opportunities, in which Myanmar women were offered jobs in interior China. The majority of victims appeared to have been recruited from inside Myanmar, and wound up being trafficked to three Chinese provinces (Henan, Anhui, and Shandong). Policy implications as well as Data limitations are also discussed.
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Notes
In our on-going field activities, it is not uncommon for us to hear about and run into so-called Myanmar Bride Villages or Vietnamese Bride Villages where sizeable numbers of women from Myanmar and Vietnam married local residents and established families. It should be made clear that not all such marriages involve force and fraud.
United Nations established an online resource center to publish information and latest research on UN actions against trafficking in person. County-specific information can be accessed at http://un-act.org/myanmar/.
Ibid.
The exchange rate between the Chinese yuan and the US dollar varies daily. We applied the rate of $1USD = ¥6.5 CNY) consistently in this paper.
All cases were downloaded from the online database maintained by China’s Supreme People’s Court ( www.wenshu.court.gov.cn ). The first trafficking case involving Myanmar women appeared in 2003.
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Qiu, G., Zhang, S.X. & Liu, W. Trafficking of Myanmar women for forced marriage in China. Crime Law Soc Change 72, 35–52 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10611-019-09826-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10611-019-09826-9