[[Image:Trafficking in Persons Report
2005.png|thumb|right|400px|Findings of the 2005 Department of
State
[http://www.state.gov/g/tip/rls/tiprpt/2005/
Trafficking in Persons Report]
]]
Human trafficking is the practice of people being
tricked,
lured,
coerced or otherwise removed from their home or
country, and then compelled to work with no or low payment or on
terms which are highly exploitative. The practice is considered to
be trade or commerce in people, which has many features of
slavery, and which is illegal in most countries. The
victims of human trafficking can be used in a variety of
situations, including
prostitution,
forced labor (including bonded labor or
debt bondage) and other forms of
involuntary servitude. The
sale of babies and children for adoption or other purposes is also
considered to be trafficking in those children.
The
Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons,
especially Women and Children (also referred to as the
Palermo Protocol) is a
protocol to the United Nations
Convention
against Transnational Organized Crime and defines human
trafficking as the "recruitment, transportation, transfer,
harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of
force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of
deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability
or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve
the consent of a person having control over another person, for the
purpose of exploitation." As at September 2008, the Protocol has
been signed by 117 countries, and there are 124 parties.
Human trafficking is the fastest-growing criminal industry in the
world, with the total annual revenue for trafficking in persons
estimated to be between
USD$5
billion and $9 billion. The
Council of
Europe states, "People trafficking has reached epidemic
proportions over the past decade, with a global annual market of
about $42.5 billion." Trafficking victims typically are recruited
using
coercion,
deception,
fraud, the abuse
of power, or outright
abduction.
Human trafficking across international borders requires cooperation
and collaboration between states if it is to be tackled
effectively. The
OSCE
(Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe), an ad hoc
intergovernmental
organization under the
United
Nations Charter, is one of the leading agencies fighting the
problem of human trafficking, with an area of operation that
includes North America, Europe, Russia, and Central Asia.
Overview
Human trafficking differs from
people
smuggling. In the latter, people voluntarily request the
smuggler's service for a fee, and there may be no deception
involved in the (illegal) agreement. On arrival at the destination,
the smuggled person is usually free to find their own way.
The trafficking victim, on the other hand, is not permitted to
leave, and is required to work or provide services of some kind on
an expoitative basis to the trafficker or others. The arrangement
may be structured as a work contract, but with no or low payment or
on terms which are highly exploitative. Sometimes the arrangement
is structured as
debt bondage, with the
victim not being permitted or able to pay off.
Victims are sometimes tricked and
lured
by false promises or are physically forced. Some traffickers use
coerce or manipulate victims and use
deception,
intimidation, feigned love, isolation, threats
and physical force, and debt bondage.
Trafficking is a lucrative industry.
In some areas, like
Russia
, Eastern Europe,
Hong
Kong
, Japan
, and
Colombia
, trafficking
is controlled by large criminal organizations. However, the
majority of trafficking is done by networks of smaller groups that
each specialize in a certain area, like recruitment,
transportation, advertising, or retail. This is very profitable
because little start-up capital is needed, and prosecution is
relatively rare.
Trafficked people are usually the most vulnerable and powerless
minorities in a region. They often come from the poorer areas where
opportunities are limited, they often are ethnic minorities, and
they often are
displaced persons
such as
runaways or
refugees, though they may come from any social
background, class or race.
Although, there are a lot of
victims that
are of a vulnerable and powerless
minority
in a region, the victims can can be from anywhere. There is no
particular type of victim of human trafficking.
Most times people
think that they are from poor countries but in fact they can be
from a very well to do family in the U.S.
This
is a type of occurrence of a crime that most times people do not
know or notice and do not know the depth of it.
Women in dire circumstances are particularly targeted by
traffickers, especially for the
sex
industry. Criminals exploit lack of opportunities, promise good
jobs or opportunities for work or study, and then force the victims
to become prostitutes. Through agents and brokers who arrange the
travel and job placements, women are escorted to their destinations
and delivered to the employers. Upon reaching their destinations,
some women learn that they have been deceived about the nature of
the work they will do; most have been lied to about the financial
arrangements and conditions of their employment and find themselves
in coercive or abusive situations from which escape is both
difficult and dangerous.
Trafficking of children
often involves exploitation of the parents' extreme poverty.
Parents may sell children to traffickers in order to pay off debts
or gain income, or they may be deceived concerning the prospects of
training and a better life for their children. In West Africa,
trafficked children have often lost one or both parents to the
African AIDS crisis.
West Africa: Stop Trafficking in Child Labor, Human
rights news
^ Thousands of male (and sometimes female) children have been
forced to be child soldiers.
The adoption process, legal and illegal, when abused can sometimes
result in cases of trafficking of babies and pregnant women between
the West and the developing world. In
David M. Smolin’s papers on child trafficking and
adoption scandals between India and the United States, he cites
there are systemic vulnerabilities in the inter-country adoption
system that makes adoption scandals predictable.
Thousands of children from Asia, Africa, and South America are sold
into the global sex trade every year. Often they are kidnapped or
orphaned, and sometimes they are actually sold by their own
families.
Men are also at risk of being trafficked for unskilled work
predominantly involving forced labor which globally generates $31bn
according to the
International Labor
Organization. Other forms of trafficking include forced
marriage and domestic servitude.
Extent
Due to the illegal nature of trafficking and differences in
methodology, the exact extent is unknown.
According to United States
State Department
data, an "estimated 600,000 to 820,000 men, women,
and children [are] trafficked across international borders each
year, approximately 70 percent are women and girls and up to 50
percent are minors. The data also illustrates that the
majority of transnational victims are trafficked into commercial
sexual exploitation." However, they go on to say that "the alarming
enslavement of people for purposes of labor exploitation, often in
their own countries, is a form of human trafficking that can be
hard to track from afar."
Reporters
have witnessed a rapid increase in prostitution in Cambodia
, Bosnia
, and Kosovo
after
UN and, in the case of the latter
two, NATO
peacekeeping forces moved in.
Peacekeeping forces have been linked to trafficking and forced
prostitution. Proponents of peacekeeping argue that the actions of
a few should not incriminate the many participants in the mission,
yet NATO and the UN have come under criticism for not taking the
issue of forced prostitution linked to peacekeeping missions
seriously enough. In a
2006 report the Future
Group, a Canadian
humanitarian
organization dedicated to ending human trafficking, ranked eight
industrialized nations and gave Canada an F for its "abysmal"
record treating victims. The report, titled "Falling Short of the
Mark: An International Study on the Treatment of Human Trafficking
Victims", concluded that Canada "is an international embarrassment"
when it comes to combating this form of slavery.
Destination, transit and source countries
A common misconception is that trafficking only occurs in poor
countries. But every country in the world is involved in the
underground, lucrative system. A “source country” is a country from
which people are trafficked. Usually, these countries are destitute
and may have been further weakened by war, corruption, natural
disasters or climate. Some source countries are Nepal, Guatemala,
the former Soviet territories, and Nigeria, but there are many
more. A “transit country”, like Mexico or Israel, is a temporary
stop on trafficked victims’ journey to the country where they will
be enslaved. A “destination country” is where trafficked persons
end up. These countries are generally affluent, since they must
have citizens with enough disposable income to "buy" the
traffickers' "products". Japan, India, much of Western Europe, and
the United States are all destination countries.
The most
common destinations for victims of human trafficking are Thailand
, Japan
, Israel
, Belgium
, the
Netherlands
, Germany
, Italy
, Turkey
and the
US
, according
to a report by the UNODC (United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
).
The major
sources of trafficked persons include Thailand
, China
, Nigeria
, Albania
, Bulgaria
, Belarus
, Moldova
, and
Ukraine
.
In a
2006 report the Future Group, a Canadian
humanitarian organization dedicated
to combatting human trafficking and the child sex trade, ranked
eight industrialized nations.
In the report, titled "Falling Short of the
Mark: An International Study on the Treatment of Human Trafficking
Victims", Canada received an F rating, the United Kingdom received
a D, while the United
States
received a B+ and Australia, Norway
, Sweden
, Germany
and Italy
all received
grades of B or B-.
North America
United States
According to the National Human Rights Center in Berkeley,
California, there are currently about 10,000 forced laborers in the
U.S., around one-third of whom are domestic servants and some
portion of whom are children. The
Associated Press reports, based on
interviews in California and in Egypt, that trafficking of children
for domestic labor in the U.S. is an extension of an illegal but
common practice in Africa.It is estimated that 14,500 to 17,500
people, mainly women and children, are trafficked to the U.S.
annually. The Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000, enhances
pre-existing criminal penalties, affords new protections to
trafficking victims and offers certain benefits and services to
victims of severe forms of trafficking. It also establishes a
Cabinet-level federal interagency task force and establishes a
federal program to provide services to trafficking victims.
Canada
In 2004, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) estimated that
600-800 persons are trafficked into Canada annually and that
additional 1,500-2,200 persons are trafficked through Canada into
the United States.In Canada, foreign trafficking for prostitution
is estimated to be worth $400 million annually.
Asia
It has been estimated that at least 200,000 to 225,000 women and
children are trafficked from
Southeast
Asia annually. Most of the trafficking destinations are within
the region (60 percent are major cities of the region; 40 percent
are outside the region).
In
Asia, Japan
is the major
destination country for trafficked women, especially from the
Philippines
and Thailand
. In Japan the prosperous entertainment market
has created a huge demand for commercial sexual workers, and such
demand is being met by trafficking women and children from the
Philippines
, Colombia
and Thailand
. Women are forced into street
prostitution, based
stripping and
live sex acts.
The US
State Department has rated Japan
as either a
‘Tier 2’ or a ‘Tier 2 Watchlist’ country every year since 2001 in
its annual Trafficking in Persons reports. Both
these ratings implied that Japan was (to a greater or lesser
extent) not fully compliant with minimum standards for the
elimination of human trafficking trade. There are currently an
estimated 300,000 women and children involved in the sex trade
throughout
Southeast Asia.
It is
common that Thai women are lured to
Japan
and sold to Yakuza-controlled
brothels where they are forced to work off their price. By
the late 1990s,
UNICEF estimated that there
are 60,000
child
prostitutes in the Philippines, describing Angeles City
brothels as "notorious" for offering sex
with children.UNICEF estimates many of the 200 brothels in the
notorious Angeles City offer children for sex.
Many of
the Iraqi
women
fleeing the Iraq War are turning to
prostitution, while others are trafficked abroad, to countries like
Syria, Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Turkey .
In
Syria
alone an estimated 50,000 Iraqi refugee girls and women, many of them
widows, had been forced into prostitution . Cheap Iraqi prostitutes
have helped to make Syria a popular destination for sex tourists.
The clients come from wealthier countries in the
Middle East. High prices are offered for
virgins.
As many
as 200,000 Nepali
girls, many
under 14, have been sold into the sex
slavery in India. Nepalese women and girls, especially
virgins, are favored in India because of their light skin.
Africa
In parts
of Ghana
, a family
may be punished for an offense by having to turn over a virgin
female to serve as a sex slave within the offended family.
In this instance, the woman does not gain the title of "wife."
In parts
of Ghana, Togo
, and
Benin
, shrine slavery persists, despite being illegal in
Ghana since 1998. In this system of slavery of
ritual servitude, sometimes called
trokosi (in Ghana) or
voodoosi in Togo and Benin,
young virgin girls are given as slaves in traditional shrines and
are used sexually by the priests in addition to providing free
labor for the shrine.
Europe
Since the
fall of the Iron Curtain, former
Eastern bloc countries such as Albania
, Moldova
, Romania
, Bulgaria
, Russia
, Belarus
and Ukraine
have become the major source countries for
trafficking of women and children. Young women and girls are
often lured to wealthier countries by promises of money and work
and then compelled to work in prostitution. It is estimated that
2/3 of women trafficked for prostitution worldwide annually come
from
Eastern Europe, three-quarters
having never worked as prostitutes before. The major destinations
are Western Europe (Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, UK,
Greece), the Middle East (Turkey, Israel, the United Arab
Emirates), Asia, Russia and the United States. An estimated 500,000
women from Central and Eastern Europe are working in prostitution
in the
EU alone, not all of them being victims of
trafficking.
In
Netherlands
, it is estimated that there are from 1,000 to 7,000
trafficking victims a year. Most police investigations
relate to legal sex businesses, with all sectors of prostitution
being well represented, but with window brothels being particularly
overrepresented.
In 2008, there were 809 registered trafficking victims, 763 were women and at least 60 percent of them were forced to work in the sex industry. All victims from Hungary were female and were forced into prostitution.
Out of
all Amsterdam
's 8,000 to 11,000 prostitutes, more than 75% are
from Eastern Europe, Africa and Asia, according to a
former prostitute who produced a report about the sex trade in
Amsterdam, in 2008. An article in
Le Monde in 1997
found that 80% of prostitutes in the Netherlands were foreigners
and 70% had no immigration papers.
In
Germany
, the trafficking of women from Eastern Europe is often organized by people
from that same region. The German Federal Police Office BKA
reported in 2006 a total of 357 completed
investigations of human trafficking, with 775 victims.
Thirty-five percent of the suspects were Germans born in Germany
and 8% were German citizens born outside of Germany.
In
Greece
, according
to NGO estimates, there are 13,000-14,000 trafficking victims in
the country at any given time. Major countries of origin for
trafficking victims include Nigeria, Ukraine, Russia, Bulgaria,
Albania, Moldova, Romania, and Belarus.
In
Switzerland
, the police estimates that there may be between
1,500 and 3,000 victims of human trafficking. The organisers
and their victims generally come from Hungary, Slovakia, Romania,
Ukraine, Moldova, Lithuania, Brazil, the Dominican Republic,
Thailand and Cambodia, and, to a lesser extent, Africa.
In
Belgium
, in 2007, prosecutors handled 418 trafficking
cases, including 219 economic exploitation and 168 sexual
exploitation cases. The federal judicial police handled 196
trafficking files, compared with 184 in 2006. In 2007 the police
arrested 342 persons for smuggling and trafficking-related crimes .
A recent
report by RiskMonitor foundation found that 70% of the prostitutes
who work in Belgium are from Bulgaria
.
In
Austria
, Vienna has the largest number of trafficking
cases, although trafficking is also a problem in urban centers such
as Graz, Linz, Salzburg, and Innsbruck. The NGO
Lateinamerikanische Frauen in Oesterreich–Interventionsstelle fuer
Betroffene des Frauenhandels (LEFOE-IBF) reported assisting 108
trafficking victims in 2006, down from 151 in 2005 .
In
Spain
, in 2007, officials identified 1,035 sex
trafficking victims and 445 labor trafficking victims
.
In the
United
Kingdom
, the Home Office has stated that 71 women were
trafficked into prostitution in 1998. They also suggest that
the actual figure could be up to 1,420 women trafficked into the UK
during the same period. However, the figures are problematic as the
definition used in the UK to identify cases of sex trafficking -
derived from the Sexual Offences Act 2003 - does not require that
victims have been coerced or misled. Thus, any individual who moves
to the UK for the purposes of sex work can be regarded as having
been trafficked - even if they did so with their knowledge and
consent. The Home Office do not appear to be keeping records of the
number of people trafficked into the UK for purposes other than
sexual exploitation.
In
poverty-stricken Moldova
, where the unemployment
rate for women ranges as high as 68% and one-third of the workforce
live and work abroad, experts estimate that since the collapse of
the Soviet Union between 200,000 and 400,000 women have been sold
into prostitution abroad—perhaps up to 10% of the female
population. In Ukraine
, a survey conducted by the NGO La Strada Ukraine in
2001–2003, based on a sample of 106 women being trafficked out of
Ukraine found that 3% were under 18, and the U.S.
State Department
reported in 2004 that incidents of minors being
trafficked was increasing. It is estimated that half a
million Ukrainian women were trafficked abroad since 1991 (80% of
all unemployed in Ukraine are women).
Russia
is a source,
transit, and destination country for men, women, and children
trafficked for various forms of exploitation. Many women
have been trafficked overseas for the purpose of sexual
exploitation.
Annually, thousands of trafficked Russian
women end up as prostitutes in Western
Europe, America
, Canada
, Israel
and Asian countries. The ILO estimates that there
may be up to one million illegal immigrants in Russia who are
victims of forced labor, which is a form of trafficking. There have
also been reports of child sex tourism in Russia; however, law
enforcement authorities report a decrease in the number of cases of
child sex tourism and attribute this to aggressive police
investigations and Russian cooperation with foreign law
enforcement.
Oceania
It has been estimated that the number of victims of human
trafficking in
Australia ranges between
300 and 1000 a year. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC) lists Australia as one of 21 trafficking destination
countries in the high destination category.
South America
Poor economic conditions and social problems create a climate which
is favorable to human trafficking.
Interpol
estimates that 35,000 women are trafficked out of
Colombia
every year, with estimated profits of $500 million,
making it second only to the Dominican Republic
in the West . In Colombia, the IOM and
domestic NGOs estimate that international organized crime networks
are responsible for most transnational trafficking. Domestically,
organized crime networks, some related to illegal armed groups, are
also responsible for trafficking for sexual exploitation or
organized begging, and the armed conflict has made a large number
of internal trafficking victims vulnerable.
In
Brazil
, the
National Research on Trafficking in Women, Children, and
Adolescents for Sexual Exploitation Purposes identified 241
international and national trafficking routes.
Causes of trafficking
Trafficking in people has been facilitated by porous borders and
advanced communication technologies, it has become increasingly
transnational in scope and highly lucrative. Unlike drugs or arms,
people can be "sold" many times.
The opening up of Asian markets, porous
borders, the end of the Soviet Union
and the collapse of the former
Yugoslavia
have contributed to this
globalization.
Relation to other vulnerability issues
Human trafficking and sexual exploitation
There is no universally accepted definition of trafficking for
sexual exploitation. The term encompasses the organized movement of
people, usually women, between countries and within countries for
sex work with the use of physical coercion, deception and bondage
through forced debt. However, the issue becomes contentious when
the element of coercion is removed from the definition to
incorporate facilitating the willing involvement in prostitution.
For example, In the United Kingdom, The Sexual Offenses Act, 2003
incorporated trafficking for sexual exploitation but did not
require those committing the offense to use coercion, deception or
force, so that it also includes any person who enters the UK to
carry out sex work with consent as having been trafficked.
Save the Children stated "The issue gets mired in controversy and
confusion when prostitution itself is considered as a violation of
the basic human rights of both adult women and minors, and equal to
sexual exploitation per se..... trafficking and prostitution become
conflated with each other.... On account of the historical
conflation of trafficking and prostitution both legally and in
popular understanding, an overwhelming degree of effort and
interventions of anti-trafficking groups are concentrated on
trafficking into prostitution" The line between forced and
voluntary prostitution is very thin, and prostitution in and on
itself is seen by many as an abusive practice and a form of
violence against women.
In
Sweden
, Norway
and Iceland
it is illegal to pay for sex (the client commits a
crime, but not the prostitute), as these countries consider all
forms of prostitution to be exploitive or de facto
slavery.
Sexual trafficking includes coercing a migrant into a sexual act as
a condition of allowing or arranging the migration. Sexual
trafficking uses physical coercion, deception and bondage incurred
through forced debt. Trafficked women and children, for instance,
are often promised work in the domestic or service industry, but
instead are usually taken to
brothels where
their passports and other identification papers are confiscated.
They may be beaten or locked up and promised their freedom only
after earning – through prostitution – their purchase price, as
well as their travel and visa costs
The main motive of a woman (in some cases an underage girl) to
accept an offer from a trafficker is better financial opportunities
for herself or her family. In many cases traffickers initially
offer ‘legitimate’ work or the promise of an opportunity to study.
The main types of work offered are in the catering and hotel
industry, in bars and clubs, modeling contracts, or au pair work.
Traffickers sometimes use offers of marriage, threats, intimidation
and kidnapping as means of obtaining victims. In the majority of
cases, the women end up in prostitution. Also some (migrating)
prostitutes become victims of human
trafficking. Some women know they will be
working as prostitutes, but they have an inaccurate view of the
circumstances and the conditions of the work in their country of
destination.
The
Fundamentalist
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, (not to be
confused with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints) in
the US
and Canada
, has also
been implicated in the trafficking of underage women across state
lines and international borders (US/Canada). In most cases,
this is for the continuation of
polygamous
practices, in the form of
plural
marriage.
Trafficking victims are also exposed to different psychological
problems. They suffer social alienation in the host and home
countries. Stigmatization, social exclusion and intolerance make
reintegration into local communities difficult. The governments
offer little assistance and social services to trafficked victims
upon their return. As the victims are also pushed into
drug trafficking, many of them face
criminal sanctions.
Trafficking of children
Trafficking of children is the recruitment, transportation,
transfer, harboring, or receipt of children for the purpose of
exploitation.
Commercial
sexual exploitation of children can take many forms and include
forcing a child into
prostitution or
other forms of sexual activity or
child pornography. Child exploitation can
also include
forced labour or
services,
slavery or practices similar to
slavery, servitude, the removal of organs, illicit
international adoption, trafficking
for early marriage, recruitment as
child soldiers, for use in
begging or as athletes (such as
child camel jockeys or football players),
or for recruitment for cults.
Efforts to reduce human trafficking
Governments, international associations, and nongovernmental
organizations have all tried to end human trafficking with various
degrees of success.
Some victims that have overcome this type of crime, go out to
educate others about this by sharing their story. This can help
others to heal and deal with what has happened to them.
Intergovernmental organizations
OSCE
In 2003 the OSCE established an anti-trafficking mechanism aimed at
raising public awareness of the problem and building the political
will within participating States to tackle it effectively.
The OSCE actions against human trafficking are coordinated by the
Office of the
Special Representative for Combating the Traffic of Human
Beings Since 2006 this office has been headed by
Eva
Biaudet, a former Member of Parliament and Minister of Health
and Social Services in her native Finland.
The activities of the Office of the Special Representative range
from training law enforcement agencies to tackle human trafficking
to promoting policies aimed at rooting out corruption and organised
crime. The Special Representative also visits countries and can, on
their request, support the formation and implementation of their
anti-trafficking policies. In other cases the Special
Representative provides advice regarding implementation of the
decisions on human trafficking, and assists governments, ministers
and officials to achieved their stated goals of tackling human
trafficking.
Government actions

A human trafficking awareness poster
from the Canadian Department of Justice.
Actions taken to combat human trafficking vary from government to
government. Some have introduced legislation specifically aimed at
making human trafficking illegal. Governments can also develop
systems of co-operation between different nation’s law enforcement
agencies and with non-government organizations (NGOs). Many
countries though have come under criticism for inaction, or
ineffective action. Criticisms include failure of governments in
not properly identifying and protecting trafficking victims, that
immigration policies might re-victimize trafficking victims, or
insufficient action in helping prevent vulnerable people becoming
trafficking victims.
A particular criticism has been the reluctance of some countries to
tackle trafficking for purposes other than sex.
Other actions governments could take is raise awareness. This can
take on three forms. Firstly in raising awareness amongst potential
victims, in particular in countries where human traffickers are
active. Secondly, raising awareness amongst police, social welfare
workers and immigration officers. And in countries where
prostitution is legal or semi-legal, raising awareness amongst the
clients of prostitution, to look out for signs of a human
trafficking victim.
Raising awareness can take on different forms. One method is
through the use of awareness films or through posters .
International law
In 2000 the United Nations adopted the
Convention
against Transnational Organized Crime, also called the Palermo
Convention, and two
Palermo
protocols there to:
All of these instruments contain elements of the current
international law on trafficking in human beings.
Council of Europe
The Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in
Human Beings was adopted by the
Council of Europe on 16 May 2005. The aim
of the convention is to prevent and combat the trafficking in human
beings. The Convention entered into force on 1 February 2008. Of
the 47 member states of the Council of Europe, so far 21 have
signed the convention and 17 have ratified it.. The Directorate of
Communication of the Council of Europe has spearheaded a campaign
to raise awareness of trafficking across it 47 member States.
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, after intense pressure from Human Rights
organisations, trafficking for labour exploitation was made illegal
in 2004 (trafficking for sexual exploitation being criminalised
many years previously). However, the 2004 law has been used very
rarely and by mid-2007 there had not been a single conviction under
these provisions.
United States law
Laws against trafficking in the United States exist at the federal
and state levels. Over half of the states now criminalize human
trafficking though the penalties are not as tough as the federal
laws. Related federal and state efforts focus on regulating the
tourism industry to prevent the facilitation of sex tourism and
regulate international marriage brokers to ensure criminal
background checks and information on how to get help are given to
the potential bride.
Non-governmental organizations
Human rights organisations, including
Amnesty International,
Anti-Slavery International,
and
Human Rights Watchhave
campaigned against human trafficking. Several non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) and human rights organizations have been
formed to combat human trafficking, while other NGO's work against
human trafficking as one of their major programs. Some of these
include:
Arizona League to End
Regional Trafficking (ALERT) is a coalition
representing partnerships with law enforcement, faith-based
communities, non-profit organizations, social service agencies,
attorneys and concerned citizens. ALERT helps victims of
trafficking by providing: food and shelter; medical care; mental
health counseling; immigration assistance; legal assistance;
language interpretation; case management; and other culturally
appropriate services throughout the state of Arizona. Through
education, outreach and a variety of programs and services, ALERT
strives to end the suffering and dehumanization of victims of human
trafficking..
Coalition to
Abolish Slavery and Trafficking (CAST) is a Los
Angeles-based anti-human trafficking organization. Founded in 1998,
CAST helps rehabilitate survivors of trafficking, raises awareness,
and affects legislation and public policy surrounding human
trafficking, through social, advocacy and legal services. CAST
defines human trafficking as “a modern-day form of slavery,” in
which victims are subjected to force, fraud or coercion for the
purpose of forced labor or sexual exploitation. Victims of
trafficking can work in domestic service, factories, farms,
restaurants, construction sites, hotel housekeeping, servile
marriage, forced prostitution, child prostitution and child
pornography.
Chab Dai, ("joining hands"
in Khmer) was founded in Cambodia in 2005, and now has
international offices in the US, UK, and Canada. Chab Dai aims to
bring an end to human trafficking and commercial sexual
exploitation through coalition building, advocacy, research and
education. In Cambodia, Chab Dai facilitates a coalition of over 40
NGOs all working against trafficking in areas such as prevention,
aftercare and legal intervention. Chab Dai assists coalition
members collaborate and improve capacity through training, advice
clinics, and discussion forums; and works to build bridges between
members, UN agencies and government. Chab Dai USA, located in
California, is committed to encouraging collaboration amongst
existing agencies while assisting organizations improve capacity,
particularly according to international best practice models.
Transitions
Global, is an organization that builds new lives for
survivors of sex trafficking. The organization, founded by James
& Athena Pond, began in 2006 to provide older teen victims of
sex trafficking with rehabilitation and reintegration services.
Currently, the organization has a shelter and transitional home in
Phnom Penh, Cambodia and has undertaken a new project in Mumbai,
India. Transitions Global has also assisted other NGO's in
establishing aftercare projects in Greece and Indonesia. Their
model for aftercare is an innovative form of 'transitional care'
focusing on reintegration through providing girls with viable job
skills, life skills and career placement.
The SOLD Project,
founded in 2007 is a grassroots organization dedicated to inspiring
and empowering individuals to stop child prostitution before it
begins. The SOLD Project started as a film project to document the
realities of child prostitution in Thailand with hopes to increase
awareness and advocacy. However, SOLD became more than a film and
is now a non-profit organization focused on the prevention of child
prostitution through education and community reform. The SOLD
Project Prevention Program is 4-fold 1)Scholarships 2) Mentorship
3) After School Programs 4) Human Trafficking Awareness
Programs.
Alliance Anti
Traffic , founded in 2007 is a French non-governmental
organization created to fight against trafficking in Women and
Children.The organization intervenes to protect women and girls
from these forms of abuse. AAT also works on suppression and the
demand side.AAT assist targeted women and children through a full
process: first it prevents at-risk groups, AAT protect victims
found in exploitation places and after repatriate them back into
their communities. Then AAT reintegrate women and girls based on
their choice and the needs of their communities. AAT finally
empowers targeted girls to develop alternatives and to prevent as
well as to protect vulnerable women and children.
www.Allianceantitrafic.org
Every Child
Ministries, founded in 1985, has been working on
projects against human trafficking since 2000. The organization's
most extensive project has been an "Initiative against Shrine
Slavery" called
ritual servitude
and rehabilitation of former shrine slaves. www.ecmafrica.org
Somaly Mam
Foundation, founded in 2007 at the United Nations with
the support of UNICEF, UNIFEM, and IOM, the Somaly Mam Foundation
is known for empowering victims of human trafficking to become
activists and agents of change. With the leadership of world
renowned Cambodian activist,
Somaly Mam,
the organization has garnered support from influential leaders and
celebrities such as Susan Sarandon, Daryl Hannah, Diane von
Furstenberg, and Hillary Clinton. The foundation also runs
activities to support Rescue and Rehabilitation of victims in
Southeast Asia and works to increase global awareness to inspire
action.
Redlight Children
Campaign, founded in 2002 is a non-profit organization
created by New York lawyer and president of Priority Films Guy
Jacobson and Israeli actress Adi Ezroni in 2002, to combat
worldwide child sexual exploitation and human trafficking. Its
mission is to decrease the demand side of the international sex
trade through legislation and enforcement while raising awareness
utilizing mass media and grassroots outreach. Through its
partnership with Priority Films, Redlight Children has recently
launched the K11 Project—three films which attempt to expose real
life experiences of the underage sex trade. K11 consists of two
documentaries and a feature-length narrative, Holly (film), which
were all filmed on location in Cambodia. RedLight also began
working the Somaly Mam Foundation in 2003. A comprehensive
blueprint outlines three phases of the attack on this crime against
humanity: raising awareness, correcting, improving, and enforcing
current legislation, followed by allocating the appropriate
resources to mirror the size and scope of the epidemic. The hope is
that utilizing both film and mass media will put the issue on the
international agenda, inciting action from the general public and
policy makers, thereby leading to an allocation of appropriate
resources and stricter enforcement that will effectively reduce
demand.
Not For Sale
Campaign, founded in 2007, equips and mobilizes Smart
Activists to deploy innovative solutions to re-abolish slavery in
their own backyards and across the globe. Headquartered in Montara,
CA, the Not For Sale Campaign has more than 40 regional chapters
across the United States and Canada. Through the innovation and
implementation of 'open-source activism', the campaign identifies
trafficking rings inside the United States and collaborates with
local law enforcement and community groups to shut them down and
provide support for the victims. Internationally, the campaign
partners with poorly resourced abolitionist groups internationally
to enhance their capacity. ;
^
Not For Sale: Take Action;
^
SlaveryMap;
^
Become a
Conscious Consumer: Take Action;
^
Take
The Free2Play pledge.
Polaris Project, founded in 2002, is an
international anti-human trafficking organization with offices in
Washington DC, New Jersey, Colorado, and Japan. Polaris Project's
comprehensive approach includes operating local and national human
trafficking hotlines, conducting direct outreach and victim
identification, providing social services and housing to victims,
advocating for stronger state and national anti-trafficking
legislation, and engaging community members in grassroots efforts.
Polaris
project;
^
Polaris project: Take Action.
Tiny Stars. Using the
Protect Act of 2003, Tiny Stars works
closely with Federal Law enforcement agencies to build cases
against American child predators. Founded by Jake Collins in 2001,
Tiny Stars focuses on identifying and tracking pedophiles who
victimize children under the age of 14 years old. To advance its
mission, the organization has developed a network of undercover
agents, often former government operatives.
Shared Hope
International, founded in 1998 by former Congresswoman
Linda Smith, is a non-profit organization which exists to rescue
and restore women and children in crisis. They are part of a
worldwide effort to prevent and eradicate sex trafficking and
slavery through education and public awareness. For over a decade,
Shared Hope International has worked diligently around the world
and in the United States, partnering with local groups to help
women and children escape the sex trade by offering a place of
refuge and a chance for a new future. Shared Hope uses a
three-pronged strategy of prevention, rescue and restoration, which
also addresses ending the demand for women and especially children
in the commercial sex industry, as well as performing field
research and making policy recommendations on state and federal
levels.
National Human Trafficking Resource Center (NHTRC)
is a program funded by the Department of Health and Human Services.
The NHTRC operates the National Human Trafficking Resource Center
Hotline 24-hours a day, 365 days a year.
Made By Survivors
(MBS)
[710298] is a division of
The Emancipation Network
(TEN) and is an organization that uses
economic empowerment to help survivors
of trafficking and people at high risk to rebuild their lives.
MBS's handicraft programs offer these survivors a job that enables
them to support themselves and live a meaningful, independent life.
For those still living at the shelter, handicrafts programs provide
therapeutic benefits, job training, literacy, social interaction,
and a stipend for part-time work. MBS partners with 18 anti-slavery
organizations around the world, including Thailand, Cambodia,
Nepal, India, Ukraine, Uganda, the Philippines, Tanzania, and the
United States. MBS also runs volunteer trips to India as a way to
educate people who can use the experience to get more involved and
educate the public. The trips also help the survivors to trust
people again and reintegrate them back into a normal life. In
addition, MBS offers people the opportunity to host parties at
their homes to sell the handicrafts and educate friends and
family.
KARDS
Counter Trafficking In Persons Initiative is an
initiative in Nairobi, Kenya under Koinonia Advisory Research and
development Service (KARDS).Its' main aim is to create awareness on
human trafficking in East Africa, encourage various grassroot
organizations to network and share experiences, train communities
on human trafficking and counter trafficking interventions. It runs
an online directory, of the various actors involved in various
interventions (social support,creating awareness, prevention, lobby
and advocacy), the report highlights the various factors leading to
trafficking in persons in East Africa: Kenya and Tanzania, its'
extent and the needs of the organizations involved in counter
interventive measures.It aims at coming up with a bi-annual
newsletter in the year 2010. It operates due to immense support of
Mensen met een Missie, (People in Mission->Netherlands),
Prerana,
[710299] founded in
1986 in Mumbai, Prerana intervened in the largest red light
district in India (Kamathipura area). The organization strives to
save second generation trafficking victims by offering care center
services, an institutional placement program, and educational
support for the children of prostitutes in Kamathipura. The UN
recognized Prerana as 'Best Practice of working with Victims of
Organized Crime' in April 2000. It has received numerous accolades
as well.
ZOE Children's
Homes,
[710300] founded in the USA as a non-profit 501(c)3
organization in December 2002 by Michael and Carol Hart. The
organization was launched in response to the atrocities of the
human trafficking of children, our generation's modern day slavery.
The first homes were launched in January 2003 with 47 at-risk
children in Thailand. The mission of ZOE is to rescue children who
are: at-risk of being sold into prostitution slavery, already sold,
orphans, or victims of other heinous crimes and abuse. The goal is
to intervene and prevent the trafficking of children. The ZOE Child
Rescue program actively sends teams into villages, cities, and
border towns for the purpose of stopping these crimes against
children. These teams also educate and bring awareness to the
locals who are preyed upon by sex traffickers. ZOE provides food,
clothing, care, education, vocational training and a loving home
for each child. In February 2009, ZOE purchased 20 acres and is
building a new home that will house over 200 children. The goal is
to duplicate their current business model around the world.
Problems and controversies
Distinguishing human trafficking from voluntary migration is
crucial. Most controversy is centered around human trafficking for
the purpose of prostitution, especially since prostitution in and
on itself is seen by many as a form of exploitation. Estimates of
the number of people trafficked for sexual purposes is contentious
– problems of definition can be compounded by the willingness of
victims to identify as being trafficked.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on trafficking in persons
reported that most prostitution that occurs today is connected to
human trafficking: "For the most part, prostitution as actually
practiced in the world usually does satisfy the elements of
trafficking." Even most domestic prostitution satisfies the
elements of trafficking as defined in the Trafficking Protocol. The
Trafficking Protocol defines illegal trafficking as "the
recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of a
person" if an existing vulnerability – such as economic
vulnerability or sexual vulnerability – is exploited. For this
reason, threat, coercion, or use of force is not necessary to
constitute trafficking.
Whilst most mainstream human rights groups acknowledge all forms of
trafficking, there is growing criticism of the focus on trafficking
for sexual exploitation at the expense of tackling other forms such
as domestic or agricultural trafficking. Ambassador Nancy Elly
Raphael, the first director of the U.S.
Office to
Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, resigned over what
she saw as misrepresentation of the issue in order to provide
support for the anti-prostitution lobby. She says "It was so
ideological. Prostitution, that's what was driving the whole
program. They kept saying, 'If you didn't have prostitution, you
wouldn't have trafficking.' I was happy to leave."
In popular culture
- Lilya
4-ever, a film based loosely on the real life of Dangoule Rasalaite, portrays a young
woman from the former Soviet Union
who is deceived into being trafficked for
exploitation in Sweden
.
- Human trafficking has also been portrayed in the Canadian/UK TV
drama Sex Traffic.
- Based on true events, Svetlana's
Journey by Michael Cory
Davis depicts the trials of a 13-year-old who loses her family
and is sold to human traffickers by her adoptive family. Drugged,
raped, and forced to endure continuous abuse by her 'clients' and
traffickers, she attempts to commit suicide, but survives.
- River of Innocents follows the 17-year-old Majlinda
into the world of modern-day slavery, where she struggles to hold
on to her humanity and to help the stolen children around her
survive.
- Dimanasus Prophecy, a movie by Dzmitry Vasilyeu about
human trafficking in Eastern Europe.
- David Mamet's 2004 film Spartan centres on the hunt for the
daughter of a high ranking US official who has been kidnapped by an
international sex slavery ring.
- Holly (2006) is a movie about a
little girl, sold by her poor family and smuggled across the border
to Cambodia
to work as a prostitute in a red light
village. The Virgin Harvest is a feature length
documentary that was filmed at the same time.
- The 2007 film Trade deals
with human trafficking out of Mexico and a brother's attempt to
rescue his kidnapped and trafficked young sister. It is based on
Peter Landesman's article about sex slaves, which was featured as
the cover story in the January 24, 2004 issue of New York Times
Magazine.
- Human
Trafficking (2005) (TV) by Christian Duguay stars Mira
Sorvino, Donald Sutherland, and Robert Carlyle. A sixteen-year-old
girl from the Ukraine
, a single mother from Russia
, an orphaned
seventeen-year-old girl from Romania
, and a twelve-year-old American tourist become the
victims of international sex slave traffickers. Sorvino and
Sutherland are the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents
who struggle to save them.
- Ghosts, a documentary by independent
film maker Nick Broomfield, follows
the story of the victims of the 2004
Morecambe Bay cockling disaster
, in which smuggled immigrants are forced in to hard
labour.
- The Jammed, an Australian film about human trafficking
in Australia.
- The
2007 film The Sugar Babies
by Amy Serrano is a documentary that
highlights the plight of Haitian
victims of human trafficking in the Dominican
Republic
. It was produced by Thor Halvorssen and funded by the Human Rights Foundation.
- The
European series Matroesjka's
deals with girls from ex-Soviet countries, who have been deceived
into sex slavery in Belgium
.
- The 2007 film Eastern
Promises by David
Cronenberg deals with a British midwife who unravels a gang of
Russian slavers when she seeks relatives to a baby of a sex slave
named Tatiana.
- The 2008 film Taken by
Pierre Morel, casting e.g. Liam Neeson,in which the main character's
daughter and her friend are taken by traffickers in Paris.
In his
quest to find his daughter, the movie depicts foreign girls in
Paris
who are "trafficked" with the purpose of forcing
them to prostitution.
- The 2008 documentary and concert film Call + Response combines contemporary
musician performances with an investigative report on worldwide
human trafficking including hidden camera footage from Thailand
brothels.
- A 2006 Punisher story arc
called The Slavers, written by Garth
Ennis, dealt with the horrors of human trafficking and sex slavery.
- In the CSI: NY episode,
"She's Not There",
the episode showcases the horrors of human trafficking when a
Russian tourist is murdered and a girl that went missing.
- The 2009 novel, A False Dawn, by Tom Lowe (St. Martins
Press, ISBN 031237917X) depicts the horrors of human trafficking in
the U.S.
- The 2009 film Happy
Endings?, filmed in Rhode Island, chronicles the lives of
the women in massage parlors in Rhode Island during a battle in the
state legislature to make prostitution illegal, focusing on issues
of human trafficking.
See also
Notes
- The Age: China sets up website to recover
trafficked children: report
- "United Nations Convention against Transnational
Organized Crime", Annex II, Section I, Article 3 (pg. 42).
Retrieved on 21 September 2009.
- UNODC - Signatories to the CTOC Trafficking
Protocol
- Human trafficking is a global problem, marketplace.publicradio.org.
- Economic Roots of Trafficking in the UNECE Region -
Regional Prep. Meeting for Beijing+10 -
pr2004/04gen_n03e.htm
- channel4.com / More4 / Ghosts / Stop the Traffik
campaign
- Council of Europe says human trafficking has
reached 'epidemic proportions' - Europe - International Herald
Tribune
- UNODC on human trafficking and migrant
smuggling
- Amnesty International - People smuggling
- Local women fall prey to sex slavery abroad
- - Trafficking in Human Beings
- Johanna Granville, "From Russia without Love: The 'Fourth Wave' of
Global Human Trafficking," Demokratizatsiya, vol. 12, no. 1
(winter 2004): pp. 147-155.
- Counter-Trafficking, International Organization for
Migration
- HumanTrafficking.com ~ The Online Research and
Training Center
- Flores p. 120
- "The Two Faces of Inter-country Adoption: The
Significance of the Indian Adoption Scandals" by David M.
Smolin, Seton Hall Law Review, 35:403–493, 2005.
- "Child Laundering: How the Inter-country Adoption System
Legitimizes and Incentivizes the Practices of Buying, Trafficking,
Kidnapping, and Stealing Children" by David M. Smolin,
bepress Legal Series, Working Paper 749, August 29,
2005.
- UNICEF - Child protection from violence, exploitation and
abuse - Trafficking and sexual exploitation
- "A global alliance against forced labour", ILO, 11 May
2005)
- I. Introduction
- Nato force 'feeds Kosovo sex trade'
- Kosovo UN troops 'fuel sex trade'
- Conflict, Sexual Trafficking, and
Peacekeeping
- UN troops cautioned on sex abuse
- Benjamin Perrin, Falling short of the mark: an international study on the
treatment of human trafficking victims,
[[http://www.humantrafficking.org humantrafficking.org.
- The Emancipation Network
- [1]
- - Falling Short Of The Mark: An International Study
On The Treatment Of Human Trafficking Victim
- Human Trafficking & Modern-day Slavery -
Canada
- Women & The Economy - Globalization &
Migration
- [2]
- Dinan K. Owed justice: Thai women trafficked into debt bondage
in Japan. New York, NY, Human Rights Watch, 2000
- Sex-slave trade flourishes in Thailand
- "Woman's Dying Wish: to punish traffickers who
ruined her life" The Nation, January 23, 2006
- A modern form of slavery: Trafficking of Burmese Women and
Girls into Brothels in Thailand
- BBC Politics 97
- '50,000 Iraqi refugees' forced into
prostitution
- Iraqi refugees forced into prostitution
- Desperate Iraqi Refugees Turn to Sex Trade in
Syria
- Millions Suffer in Sex Slavery
- Fair skin and young looks: Nepalese victims of human
trafficking languish in Indian brothels
- Andrew Levine Productions, "The Day My God Died", 2003 documentary film; shown on
PBS programs Independent
Lens in 2004 and Global Voices in 2008.
- Slavery in Ghana. The Trokosi Tradition
- Trokosi Slavery, haunsinafrica.com
- Ghana's trapped slaves, By Humphrey Hawksley in
eastern Ghana, 8 February 2001. BBC News
- Eastern Europe Exports Flesh to the EU
- Local women fall prey to sex slavery abroad
- Crime gangs 'expand sex slavery into
shires'
- Eastern Europe - Coalition Against Trafficking of
Women
- A modern slave's brutal odyssey
- Moldova: Lower prices behind sex slavery boom and child
prostitution
- The Russian Mafia in Asia
- For East Europe’s Women, a Rude Awakening
- [3]
- [4]
- [5]
- [6]
- [7]
- Timesonline.co.uk
- [8]
- [9]
- Reports on human trafficking, by the BKA.
- [10]
- [11]
- [12]
- [13]
- [14]
- [15]
- Stopping Traffic: Exploring the extent of, and
responses to, trafficking in women for sexual exploitation in the
UK
- Sold as a sex slave in Europe
- Jana Costachi, "Preventing Victimization in Moldova"
Global Issues, June 2003
- The "Natasha" Trade - The Transnational Shadow Market of
Trafficking in Women
- Poverty, crime and migration are acute issues as Eastern
European cities continue to grow
- Human Trafficking & Modern-day Slavery -
Russia
- Police bring home 3 sex slaves from China
- Russia: With No Jobs At Home, Women Fall Victim To
Trafficking
- 2004 parliamentary inquiry into sexual
servitude in Australia.
- United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime - Trafficking in persons: global patterns
- [16]
- [17]
- Colla UK_Sarah_final
- Definition of Trafficking - Save the Children
Nepal
- Migration Information Programme. Trafficking and prostitution:
the growing exploitation of migrant women from central and
eastern
Europe. Geneva, International Organization for Migration,
1995.
- Chauzy JP. Kyrgyz Republic: trafficking. Geneva, International
Organization for Migration, 20 January 2001 (Press briefing
notes).
- Causes of Human Trafficking
- Robert Matas, Where 'the handsome ones go to the leaders',
May 3, 2008, Globe & Mail.
- Daniel Woods, Bountiful, B.C., August 4, 2001,
rickross.com.
- British-born teenagers being trafficked for sexual
exploitation within UK, police say | Society | The
Guardian
- uefa.com
- (archived from the original on 2007-10-0-6)
- Trafficking in Persons - Poster (English
version)
- Council of Europe - Council of Europe Convention on
Action against Trafficking in Human Beings (CETS No. 197)
- Council of Europe Convention on Action against
Trafficking in Human Beings, CETS No.: 197, 16 May 2005
- Arizona
League to End Regional Trafficking
- Coalition to
Abolish Slavery and Trafficking
- Chab
Dai
- Transitions Global
- The
SOLD Project
- Somaly Mam
Foundation
- redlightchildren.org
- The Not For Sale Campaign
- Tiny Stars TinyStars.
- http://www.sharedhope.org
- “Shame of the Cities,” Article in World Magazine, by Mark
Bergin, February 28, 2009 http://www.worldmag.com/articles/15011
Retrieved Nov. 23, 2009
- Polaris project: National Human Trafficking
Hotline .
- madebysurvivors.com
- http:www.kardsafrica.org
- http://humantrafficking.kardsafrica.org/joomla
- http://www.mensenmeteenmissie.nl/
- ZOE
Children's Homes
- The Challenge of Measuring Slavery, Kevin Bales
(MS-Word format) (archived from the original on 2006-02-20)
- [18]
- Joel Brinkley: An obsession with
prostitution.
- River of Innocents.
- Holly, priorityfilms.com (archived from
the original on 2007-10-21).
- Flores, T. (2007), The sacred bath: An American teen's story of
modern day slavery. New York: iUniverse, Inc.
ISBN:13:978-0595437184
External links
Articles and resources
- Trafficking in Eastern Europe: Stories from
2008/2009
- In Modern Bondage: Sex Trafficking in the
Americas (PDF)
- Human Trafficking: Europe's New Shame and Disgrace
- spotlight europe 2008/04
- Lost Daughters - An Ongoing Tragedy in Nepal, Women
News Network - WNN, Dec 05, 2008
- National Human Trafficking Hotline - 1.888.3737.888
- Call the National Human Trafficking Resource Center Hotline 24
hours a day to report suspected human trafficking, for general
information about human trafficking and to request training and
technical assistance for both community groups and law enforcement
in the issued surrounding human trafficking and modern day
slavery.
- Polaris Project - The website is a sizable web-based
resource of news articles and general information about human
trafficking and modern day slavery in the United States.
- Polaris Project Action Center -This website, operated by
the National Grassroots division of Polaris Project, serves as a
resource for those unfamiliar with the issues of human trafficking
in the United States with the purpose of informing and enabling
people to take direct action to stop human trafficking in their
communities
- Reducing the Impact of Bias, Power and Culture When
Assisting Trafficked Persons: A Guide for Service Providers
(Humanatis LLC 2007)
- Gaining the Trust of Your Victim Witness: A Guide for Law
Enforcement Working Human Trafficking Cases (Humanatis LLC
2007)
- 50 Ways Local Government Officials Can Combat Human
Trafficking in Their Communities (Humanatis LLC 2008)
- 'Slavery in the 21st century - BBC
- 'Asia's sex trade is 'slavery' - BBC
- Asia's child sex victims ignored – BBC
- 'Race to break camel slavery - Scotland on
Sunday
- 'Sex trade's reliance on forced labour -
BBC
- 'A modern slave's brutal odyssey - BBC
- 'Child traffic victims 'failed'- BBC
- Europe warned over trafficking - BBC
- 'Balkans urged to curb trafficking - BBC
- 5,000 child sex slaves in UK - The Independent
- People trafficking: upholding rights and understanding
vulnerabilities, Forced
Migration Review, University of Oxford
.
- People trafficking: upholding rights &
understanding vulnerabilities - special issue of Forced Migration
Review
- 'Coalition Against Trafficking in Women
Factbook
- International Organization for Migration Data and
Research on Human Trafficking 2005
- 'Sex Trafficking of Women in the United States:
International and Domestic Trends - Coalition Against Trafficking
in Women
- Fears of rising child sex trade – The
Guardian
- Women and Children First: The Economics of Sex
Trafficking. Lydersen, Kari. LiP
Magazine, April 2002
- Human Trafficking, Fourth report of the Dutch
National Rapporteur
- 'Kidnapped children sold into slavery as camel
racers' - Guardian
- Amnesty International UK trafficking/forced
prostitution
- Amnesty International USA - Human
Trafficking
- Amnesty International - Council of Europe: Protect
victims of people trafficking
- Gergana Danailova-Trainor, Patrick Belser, Globalization and the illicit market for human
trafficking: an empirical analysis of supply and demand ,
ILO, 2006.
- Saving Hope International (SHI), Nicole Severson,
Established Nov/2007, SHI works with government to strengthen laws
against trafficking. SHI also
assists in the rehabilitation of trafficked persons.
Government and international governmental organizations
- Flores, T. (2007), The sacred bath: An American teen's story of
modern day slavery. New York: iUniverse, Inc.
ISBN:13:978-0595437184