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In this Position Piece, I critically reflect upon some epistemological and political issues of interventions and intervention-oriented research in post-trafficking mental health care. I discuss three loci of friction within the framework of a critical global mental health approach to trafficking aftercare: ethnography, biomedical studies, and post-trafficking care. I address these loci through three case studies: two drawn from my own ethnographic fieldwork and one from a recent systematic review of biomedical studies on post-trafficking mental health. My discussion focuses on the limits of such activities when conducted as isolated interventions and highlights the need for radical interdisciplinary and participatory approaches.

Original publication

DOI

10.17157/mat.7.2.742

Type

Journal article

Journal

Medicine Anthropology Theory

Publisher

Edinburgh University Library

Publication Date

02/09/2020

Volume

7

Pages

230 - 246