How salon professionals can address sex trafficking and intimate partner violence
As found in one of the studies in today's Crime Research Update
Hello! I'm Aaron Jacklin, and this is The Art of Explaining Crime, an independent newsletter that helps you think and write about crime.
Use this tip sheet to help you integrate the latest research into your work. It's a directory of new crime research published by the academic journals that I monitor. The directory includes, for example, this study listing:
Journal: Journal of Interpersonal Violence
Keywords: violence, intimate partner violence, intimate partner, human trafficking, sex trafficking, exploitation, victim, law enforcement, policy, law
First author: Alexandra T. Hughes-Wegner (Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA) [+8 other authors]
In this study, researchers found that salon professionals know that they encounter clients experiencing sex trafficking or intimate partner violence and want training that will help them intervene and work with law enforcement.
You’ll find more listings for today’s new research below.

The research listings for today's research are sorted by two broad categories: crime type and criminal justice/legal system stage. Research that doesn’t get sorted into those categories follows under “Unsorted Research.”
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