Guggisberg (2014) 																						reports on criminal Rroma clans that allegedly force children into crime. 																						Parents surrender their children to an omnipotent clan chief – to whom they are 																						indebted – for begging and theft and some even end up in prostitution. 																						Guggisberg uncritically reproduces the perspective of the “Wiener Drehscheibe”, 																						a social service for begging and stealing children who have been arrested by 																						the police. Guggisberg does not question that the social educator Norbert 																						Ceipek – the head of the institution – who identifies each begging or stealing 																						child as a victim of human trafficking, could himself be subject to prejudices 																						and be providing misinformation on Rroma: “Ceipek 																						opens another photo file. It shows a Roma village in Romania, which he recently 																						visited. He tells of houses, cobbled together from planks and plastic sheeting, 																						and dirt roads full of garbage. In 																						the middle is a magnificent villa. “It 																						belongs to the clan chief. He rules the villages as a state within a state”, says 																						Ceipek […]. Many of the children 																						dealt with in Vienna belong to the Roma. […] “The phenomenon of Eastern 																						European gangs of beggars is not new. But since a couple of months, it taken 																						new proportions”, says Ceipek. Very 																						active are the Bosnian gangs, he states. Every few weeks, they would bring the 																						children to different European cities, according to a rotating system. The 																						social worker explains that his aim was to provide a perspective to the 																						children, a little education. They 																						might get on better path.”” Alexander Ott, head of the Foreign Police Bern, 																						who has already been quoted repeatedly in articles about criminal Rroma gangs 																						and trafficking of children, has his say. He reproduces the usual prejudices 																						about hierarchical Rroma clans with a clan chief who leads children into crime: 																						“The network of child traffickers reaches 																						from Eastern Europe to Switzerland. “The victims are recruited in Romania, 																						Bulgaria, Bosnia, Serbia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Czech Republic and Slovakia. Often 																						they come from large Roma families, are purchased or borrowed”, says Ott. One sends the boys to steal, urges them into 																						prostitution, or forces them to beg. The 																						instigators know well that the Swiss justice system cannot prosecute the perpetrators 																						because of their young age. Adolescent 																						burglars are booming in the autumn and winter months. Ott emphasises that they have to deal with highly professional, 																						specialised and hierarchically-run clans, who practice their craft since 																						generations.” Rroma are not more criminal than other ethnic groups. They 																						are not hierarchically organised, as is often claimed, but structured largely 																						egalitarian. So-called “Rroma kings” are self-elected and have purely 																						representative character. Guggisberg and experts’ claim that behind begging 																						children there is inevitably trafficking and organized crime, is wrong.
The characteristics of transnational 																						operating trafficker networks, as presented here, are questioned by social 																						science research. Their existence itself is not denied, something that cannot 																						be in the interest of combating injustice. But their manifestation, their number, 																						their omnipotence and the motivations attributed to them have to be questioned. 																						These are often tainted by ideological fallacies, brought into connection or 																						even equated with ethnic groups such as Rroma. Furthermore, the equation of 																						child migration and trafficking has to be set into context. The stereotype of 																						Rroma as child traffickers dates back to their arrival in Western Europe, and 																						is in part based on the racist notion that Rroma did actively recruit children 																						for criminal gangs. Regarding the topic of child migration, social science 																						studies convey a more complex notion on the subject and point out that crimes 																						such as incitement to beg and steal or alleged child trafficking are often permeated 																						by various morals in the analysis and assessment by authorities, who don’t appropriately 																						consider the perspective and motivations of migrating children and their 																						relatives, and instead force on them their own ideas and definitions on organised 																						begging, criminal networks or child trafficking. Structural differences of the societies 																						involved and resulting reasons for a migration are given too little 																						consideration. In reality, behind begging children there are often simply 																						impoverished families, in which the children contribute to the family income and 																						who therefore do not correspond to bourgeois notions of a normal family and 																						childhood. De facto child trafficking is rare according to the sociological 																						studies. Furthermore, the incomes from begging are very modest, which makes 																						them unattractive for organised crime.  																						Guggisberg, who states that 200’000 children are recruited annually by 																						the trafficking mafia, contradicts this.  																						
At the end of the 																						article, Guggisberg quotes another expert opinion by Norbert Ceipek, the 																						director of the “Wiener Drehschreibe”: At 15, many of them would get married 																						and have children themselves, so that the cycle of crime continues. Likewise, Guggisberg 																						reproduces this racist prejudice uncritically. The majority of Rroma, who live 																						integrated, go to work and send their children to school, remain unmentioned 																						(compare Cree/Clapton/Smith 2012, 																						O’Connell Davidson 2011, Oude Breuil 2008, Tabin et al 2012). 
- Cree, Viviene E./Clapton, Gary/Smith, Mark (2012) The Presentation of Child 																						Trafficking in the UK: An Old and New Moral Panic? In: Br J Soc Work 44(2): 418-433.
 
- Guggisberg, Rahel (2014) Das Schicksal der Roma-Kinder von Wien. In: Tages-Anzeiger online vom 14.11.2014. http://www.tagesanzeiger.ch/leben/gesellschaft/Das-Schicksal-der-RomaKinder-von-Wien/story/14626308
 
- O’Connell 																						Davidson, Julia (2011) Moving children? Child trafficking, child migration, and 																						child rights. In: Critical Social Policy 31(3):454-477.
 
- Oude Breuil, Brenda Carina (2008) Precious children in a heartless world? The 																						complexities of child trafficking in Marseille. In: Child Soc 22(3):223-234.
 
- Tabin, Jean Pierre et al. (2012) Rapport sur 																						la mendicité « rrom » avec ou sans enfant(s). Université de Lausanne.