The images of human traf­fick­ing are all too often reduced to media tales of help­less young women tak­en by heav­i­ly accent­ed, dark-skinned captors—but the real­i­ty is a far cry from this stereo­type. In the Mid­dle East, Dubai has been accused of being a hotbed of traf­fick­ing. Par­dis Mah­davi, how­ev­er, draws a more com­pli­cat­ed and more per­son­al pic­ture of this city filled with migrants. Not all migrant work­ers are trapped, tricked, and abused. Like any­one else, they make choic­es to bet­ter their lives, though the risk of end­ing up in bad sit­u­a­tions is high.

Leg­is­la­tors hop­ing to com­bat human traf­fick­ing focus heav­i­ly on women and sex work, but there is real poten­tial for abuse of both male and female migrants in a vari­ety of areas of employment—whether on the street, in a field, at a restau­rant, or at some­one’s house. Grid­lock explores how migrants’ actu­al expe­ri­ences in Dubai con­trast with the typ­i­cal discussions—and glob­al moral panic—about human trafficking.

Mah­davi pow­er­ful­ly con­trasts migrants’ own sto­ries with inter­views with U.S. pol­i­cy mak­ers, reveal­ing the gap­ing dis­con­nect between poli­cies on human traf­fick­ing and the real­i­ties of forced labor and migra­tion in the Per­sian Gulf. To work toward solv­ing this glob­al prob­lem, we need to be hon­est about what traf­fick­ing is—and is not—and to final­ly get past the stereo­types about traf­ficked per­sons so we can real­ly under­stand the chal­lenges migrant work­ers are liv­ing through every day.

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