Sinikukka Saari
This author's articles
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31 January 2006
The EU has fought against human trafficking diligently since the adaptation of the first anti-trafficking strategy a decade ago. Nevertheless, the European anti-trafficking activity is in danger of turning into inefficient pottering due to two major shortcomings. Its efficiency suffers from tight migration policies and from weak protection of trafficking victims. These fundamental deficiencies also demonstrate that in practice traditional, sovereignty-based security thinking is still prioritised over more ethical considerations.
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11 March 2005
Sinikukka Saari is a third-year research student at the Department of International Relations in the London School of Economics and Political Science. She is writing her PhD on European multilateral human rights cooperation and its impact on Russia’s policy. She is also attached to the Finnish Institute of International Affairs as a researcher
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28 February 2005
This working paper will argue that one can identify two simultaneous and mutually contradictory processes of building security vis-ŕ-vis ’outsiders’ in today’s Europe: one pulling towards exclusion and one towards inclusion.