Saturday, April 23, 2016
Sunday, November 23, 2014
Humans for Sale: UC Research Helps Raise Awareness of Human Trafficking
Human trafficking –– or the control, ownership and sale of another human being for monetary gain –– was a common occurrence centuries ago, but many believe it doesn't exist in this day and age and not in this country.
“Not so,” says ALyse Zook-DeLange, UC communications graduate student, “The problem still exists all over the world, and right here in our own hometowns.”
While most people view prostitution as a form of human trafficking, DeLange points out that it is really not. Prostitution is a choice, but sex trafficking, one of the five types of human trafficking is not and is the central issue of a comprehensive research paper that DeLange will present in November.
The scope of DeLange’s research centered around the public’s perception of human trafficking gleaned from personal interviews she had conducted with spectators after viewing the “Invisible: Slavery Today” exhibit at Cincinnati’s National Underground Railroad Freedom Center.
Read more
Humans for Sale: UC Research Helps Raise Awareness of Human Trafficking:
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Human trafficking crackdown praiseworthy, but more remains to be done - OP-ED - Globaltimes.cn
During an interactive dialogue on human trafficking organized by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime and the Group of Friends United against Human Trafficking in 2012, the International Labor Organization estimated that at any given time, about 2.4 million people are exploited as a result of human trafficking globally.
At present, human trafficking in China is taking on new characteristics, including organized crime networks, more violent means and expansion to more areas.
Continue here:
http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/822452.shtml#.UoOcsCeKK31
Saturday, August 3, 2013
The Mexican Drug Cartels’ Other Business: Sex Trafficking | TIME.com
'“The cartels know that drugs can only be sold once, but women can be sold again and again and again,” says Teresa Ulloa, director of the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women and Girls in Latin America and the Caribbean. Ulloa, who has helped hundreds of victims of sex trafficking in Mexico, says organized crime is involved in 70% of cases.'
Read more: http://world.time.com/2013/07/31/the-mexican-drug-cartels-other-business-sex-trafficking/#ixzz2avUQkRRt
Related articles
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Journalist Faridoun Hemani calls for the public to join the movement to end human trafficking
Source: UNGIFT.HUB

In a recent TED Talk, journalist Faridoun Hemani called on the public to join the fight to end human trafficking.
CLICK ON URL:
http://www.ungift.org/knowledgehub/en/stories/October2012/journalist-faridoun-hemani-calls-for-the-public-to-join-the-movement-to-end-human-trafficking.html
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)
Related articles
- ATA Joins with National Organization to Combat Human Trafficking (sacbee.com)
- The Himalayan Times - Govt positive to declare year against human trafficking: PM - Detail News (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
- Awareness Of Human Trafficking Is Increasing, But 'So Is The Problem' (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Portugal joins Blue Heart campaign against human trafficking

Related Information:
- General Assembly President calls for redoubling of efforts to end human trafficking
- United Nations-private sector partnership crucial in meeting MDGs
- Senior UNODC and OSCE staff review past activities, plan for the future
- Ways and Means — countering smuggling of migrants
- Mexico launches national campaign against human trafficking (Español)
- Mexico takes lead in launching national campaign against human trafficking
- Interview with UNICEF on Day against Child Labour
- Interview on trafficking in persons in Asia
- Psychosocial care for women in shelter homes
- Prevent. Combat. Protect – Human Trafficking – Joint UN Commentary
- Legal and Policy Review: Responses to Human Trafficking in Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Sri Lanka
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
People trafficking surges in the South Pacific - World - NZ Herald News
Friday, August 12, 2011
Technology Use Among Human Traffickers and Counter Human Traffickers « Tech4Development
Collaboration among different anti-trafficking entities is essential to combating traffickers, especially when they use sophisticated means to conduct their work. Due to the rapid forces of globalization, human trafficking around the world has increased with the use of technology. According to Internet World Stats (2010), the last decade has seen a 400% rise in internet users; there are now over 1.8 billion internet users worldwide. The internet provides a means of global networking in which, “predators use chat rooms, message boards, peer-to-peer file-sharing servers, news groups, and specialized websites to obtain information on potential [sex tourism] destinations” (Kunze, 2010, p. 251). According to Hughes (2001), when new technologies are introduced to a network of people, they act as an enabler for “those with power to intensify the harm and expand the exploitation” (p. 1). Through technological means, the world has become more connected and a tighter network through which traffickers can intensify their work.
Due to the transient nature of human trafficking, law enforcement around the world has struggled to assist victims and identify perpetrators. With the use of online and mobile technology, trafficking of persons is even more difficult to identify because criminals exploit victims through technological means. Thus, law enforcement officers stipulate, “sex trafficking itself has ‘moved online’” (Kunze, 2010, p. 252).
Online trafficking of persons is a borderless crime without a simple solution. Kunze (2010) explains, “Unlike the flow of information on the Internet, domestic law enforcement are restricted by national boarders. Because of this, domestic law alone cannot suffice to thwart international criminal activity such as tracking via the Internet” (p. 252). The complexity of a profitable, transient industry that is exempt from international technological law creates significant barriers for anti-trafficking efforts. A review of the literature suggests that traffickers are using sophisticated avenues of technology to advance their conduct of human and sex trafficking. A relevant question to ask is if, and how, anti-trafficking efforts utilize technology in counter trafficking efforts.
Using Technology to Combat Trafficking
It is easy to condemn technology as a source for the expansion and perpetration of human and sex trafficking around the world. However, law enforcement and other anti-trafficking groups are using technology to collaborate and combat the technological skills of the traffickers. Key examples of such efforts are found in The Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking (2008), which discussed how technology is used, both to perpetuate and to combat human trafficking. The forum proceeding stated the importance of recognizing the potential gains of technology use: “rather than repressing technology, it becomes necessary to harness its potential to interfere with organized criminal activities and to combat trafficking and assist its victims” (p. 13). There are many examples provided in the Vienna Forum that further illustrate the international operations conducted to collaborate with other anti-trafficking entities and to combat human trafficking with the use of technology. The following information will briefly overview a few counter trafficking collaborations and tactics.
Organizational efforts such as INTERPOL, the G8 Sub-group on High-Tech Crime, the Virtual Global Taskforce, and the Internet Watch Foundation collaborate with international law enforcement agencies through the use of technology to share intelligence, information, and resources. Technology significantly contributes to collaboration with anti-trafficking efforts. It provides a common database for information sharing and creates an instantaneous way for agencies to communicate with one another to break down barriers of time and distance. Sophisticated technology skills are also vitally important for law enforcement to counter online traffickers. They often use the same technologies as the organized crime rings but for reverse outcomes.
INTERPOL, the largest international police organization, was created to support law enforcement agencies in their fight against international crime. One of the five key priority areas for INTERPOL is human trafficking. INTERPOL provides an intelligence database for international law enforcement to access and gain information on traffickers. INTERPOL also lists international links, resources, and networks that provide information about different trafficking investigations, and provides support in tactical operations. INTERPOL’s technological strategies create a platform for collaboration. One example of INTERPOL’s effectiveness is Project Childhood, which specifically investigates trafficking of children for sex tourism purposes in Asia. Project Childhood develops partnerships between police and other regional stakeholders to prosecute offenders and to provide restoration programs for victims (INTERPOL, 2010).
Eight countries, including Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United States, and the United Kingdom, established the G8 “Sub-group on High Tech Crime” to prevent, investigate, and prosecute cybercrimes that involved computers, networked communication, and other new technologies (UNGIFT, 2008). The 2004 meeting of G8 Justice and Home Affairs Minsters recommended that legal systems allow undercover agents to use covert filming and listening devices, and covert forms of electronic communications (Sea Island Summit, 2004, para. 2). These methods require collaboration with many international intelligence sources to gather evidence on organized crime for law enforcement operations.
The Virtual Global Taskforce (VGT) created an international partnership of law enforcement agencies in order to protect children from online exploitation and abuse. The taskforce’s main focus is to protect children with objectives to “make the internet a safer place, identify location, and help children at risk; and to hold perpetrators appropriately to account” (UNGIFT, 2008, p. 15). VGT uses creative strategies to counter trafficking opportunities with technology, such as Operation Pin. Operation Pin was launched in December 2003 by the VGT. VGT created a website that claimed to contain images of child abuse to lure potential criminals to the site. Law enforcement monitored the website, captured details about individual users who accessed the site, and reported the individual’s information to relevant national authorities. Through VGT and law enforcement collaboration, Operation Pin captured information about individuals that actively sought out information about child abuse, discouraged internet users from searching for such information, and caught many individuals in the process.
A slightly different approach regarding law enforcement efforts is the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF). IWF is a United Kingdom-based initiative that uses the internet as a ‘hotline’ for users to report illegal content online. The IWF is facilitated by law enforcement but is dependent upon worldwide internet users to report online crime. Efforts such as these support collaboration between worldwide internet users and law enforcement.
Provided information demonstrates how technology can be strategically crafted to combat human trafficking and utilized for collaboration among anti-trafficking government agencies, law enforcement, advocacy groups, and worldwide technology users. Based upon provided information, the narrative of counter trafficking efforts positions technology as a tool that anti-traffickers use: to effectively collaborate with each other, to directly combat the technological sophistication of traffickers, and to collectively gather data from internet users. With these different uses of technology in mind, I am curious and would like to more deeply explore how technology and collaboration can be utilized for anti-human trafficking efforts.
Source: ech4development.wordpress.com
Related articles
- Digicel partners with UN.GIFT (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
- Swedish Institute - The SI information films regarding Sweden's View on Human Trafficking (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
- Live - Secretariat - Office of the Special Representative and Co-ordinator for Combating Trafficking in Human Beings (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
Monday, May 16, 2011
Human trafficking project in danger after losing government funding - Civil Society - Finance - News - providing news and in-depth coverage of charities, voluntary organisations and not-for-profits
Women’s charity Eaves must raise £450,000 by the end of June in order to save the Poppy Project after losing out to the Salvation Army on government funding.
The Poppy Project, which has helped more than 700 victims of human trafficking since it was founded in 2003, has lost 90 per cent of the project’s funding and the charity is now appealing for donations to raise the £1.8m needed each year.
Eaves chief executive, Denise Marshall, has accused the government of making a decision based on the cost not quality of the bids. “Right from the start of the bidding process, when the ministry of justice first released the contract specification, it was clear that the contract would go to the most ‘economically advantageous’ – or cheapest – bidder," she said. “Quality of provision just wasn’t a priority.”
Marshall claimed that one of the key reasons Poppy lost out was its commitment to providing victims with a 90-day recovery period as opposed to the minimum 45-day suggested by the government.
Salvation Army to take over victim careThe Salvation Army will take over the responsibility for the care of adult victims of human trafficking this July and will receive £2m annually from the government for the next three years.
Major Anne Read, the Salvation Army's anti-human trafficking response co-ordinator for the UK and the Republic of Ireland, said: “For many years we have worked with and campaigned for these vulnerable victims; working with government, police and other agencies to help victims of human trafficking.”
The charity already runs safe housing for victims and will use the funding to increase its support provision by 25 per cent as well commission support from experts including human trafficking charity STOP UK.
Justice minister, Crispin Blunt, said: “This funding will allow the Salvation Army to work together with counter-trafficking agencies and specialist support organisations to provide an escape route for these men and women.”
Human trafficking project in danger after losing government funding - Civil Society - Finance - News - providing news and in-depth coverage of charities, voluntary organisations and not-for-profitsSource: civilsociety.co.uk
Related articles
- Fears for UK retreat over human trafficking as key staff are lost (guardian.co.uk)
- The trafficking victims lured to the UK, locked up and raped at £30 a time (guardian.co.uk)
- India ratify UN Conventions against Transnational Organised Crime and Corruption (advocateravikant.wordpress.com)
India ratify UN Conventions against Transnational Organised Crime and Corruption « Advocate Ravi Kant
EQUALITY INDIA NEWS / A SHAKTI VAHINI RESEARCH INITIATIVE
India has ratified the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime and its three protocols and the United Nations Convention against Corruption.The United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime is the main international instrument in the fight against transnational organized crime. It recognizes the need to foster and enhance close international cooperation in order to tackle those problems. The convention is further supplemented by three Protocols, which target specific areas and manifestations of organized crime namely Protocols to combat (1) trafficking in persons (2) migrant smuggling and (3) illicit trafficking in firearms.
The United Nations Convention against Corruption complements the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime. The Convention introduces a comprehensive set of standards, measures and rules that all countries can apply in order to strengthen their legal and regulatory regimes to fight corruption. The Convention enumerates in detail the measures to prevent corruption, including the application of prevention policies and practices, the establishment of bodies for that purpose, the application of codes of conduct for public servants, and public procurement. It recommends promoting transparency and accountability in the management of public finances and in the private sector, with tougher accounting and auditing standards. Measures to prevent money-laundering are also provided for, together with measures to secure the independence of the judiciary, public reporting and participation of society are encouraged as preventive measures. The Convention recommends the State Parties to adopt such legislative and other measures as may be necessary to establish a whole series of criminal offences. These are:
• Corruption of national or foreign public officials and officials of public international organizations;
• embezzlement, misappropriation or other diversion by a public official of any public or private property;
• trading in influence;
• abuse of functions and illicit enrichment.
In the private sector, the Convention calls for the creation of offences of embezzlement and corruption. There are other offences relating to laundering the proceeds of crime, handling stolen property, obstructing the administration of justice, and participating in and attempting embezzlement or corruption.
This also implies that Government of India formally adopting definition of Human Trafficking which is :“Trafficking in persons” shall mean 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. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs;
The UN Protocol makes Human Trafficking and Smuggling a organised crime and call upon states to provide victim support , victim repatriation , witness support and protection , Joint Investigations between member nations etc. It specially calls upon nations to ensure implementing measures to provide for the physical, psychological and social recovery of victims of trafficking in persons, including, in appropriate cases, in cooperation with non-governmental organizations, other relevant organizations and other elements of civil society, and, in particular, the provision of: (a) Appropriate housing; (b) Counselling and information, in particular as regards their legal rights, in a language that the victims of trafficking in persons can understand; (c) Medical, psychological and material assistance; and (d) Employment, educational and training opportunities. It mandates nations to ensure that take into account the age, gender and special needs of victims of trafficking in persons, in particular the special needs of children, including appropriate housing, education and care.
It also provides for nations to provide for the physical safety of victims of trafficking in persons while they are within its territory and ensure that its domestic legal system contains measures that offer victims of trafficking in persons the possibility of obtaining compensation for damage suffered.
It takes a commitment from nations that they shall establish comprehensive policies, programmes and other measures inter alia to prevent and combat trafficking in persons; and (b) to protect victims of trafficking in persons, especially women and children, from revictimization. States Parties shall endeavour to undertake measures such as research, information and mass media campaigns and social and economic initiatives to prevent and combat trafficking in persons. Policies, programmes and other measures established in accordance with this article shall, as appropriate, include cooperation with non-governmental organizations, other relevant organizations and other elements of civil society.States Parties shall take or strengthen measures, including through bilateral or multilateral cooperation, to alleviate the factors that make persons, especially women and children, vulnerable to trafficking, such as poverty, underdevelopment and lack of equal opportunity. States Parties shall adopt or strengthen legislative or other measures, such as educational, social or cultural measures, including through bilateral and multilateral cooperation, to discourage the demand that fosters all forms of exploitation of persons, especially women and children, that leads to trafficking.
It mandates that nations shall, as appropriate, cooperate with one another by exchanging information, in accordance with their domestic law, to enable them to determine: (a) whether individuals crossing or attempting to cross an international border with travel documents belonging to other persons or without travel documents are perpetrators or victims of trafficking in persons; the types of travel document that individuals have used or attempted to use to cross an international border for the purpose of trafficking in persons; and the means and methods used by organized criminal groups for the purpose of trafficking in persons, including the recruitment and transportation of victims, routes and links between and among individuals and groups engaged in such trafficking, and possible measures for detecting them.
It ensures that nations shall provide or strengthen training for law enforcement, immigration and other relevant officials in the prevention of trafficking in persons. The training should focus on methods used in preventing such trafficking, prosecuting the traffickers and protecting the rights of the victims, including protecting the victims from the traffickers. The training should also take into account the need to consider human rights and child- and gender-sensitive issues and it should encourage cooperation with nongovernmental organizations, other relevant organizations and other elements of civil society.
Reacting to the news Ravi Kant Advocate Supreme Court of India and President Shakti Vahini said that the ratification by India of the UN Protocol is a big step for the protection of rights of victims of Human Trafficking and Smuggling. This will certainly lead to stricter laws on Human Trafficking in India. This is also a step that Government of India has shown its commitment to fight Human Trafficking and Smuggling.
Related articles
- Training Ahtu Delhi Police (shaktivahini.wordpress.com)
- Minor girl rescued from trafficker (shaktivahini.wordpress.com)
- Preventing Human Trafficking is All About Location, Location, Location (bigthink.com)
India ratify UN Conventions against Transnational Organised Crime and Corruption « Advocate Ravi Kant
Source: advocateravikant.wordpress.com
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Helsingin Sanomat - Victims of human trafficking often not identified in Finland
Ombudsman for Minorities submits her first report on human trafficking
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So far only a few dozen victims of trafficking have been identified in Finland, which is presumably only a fraction of the actual number of victims, according to Biaudet. Five lawsuits have been filed against traffickers.
This is why authorities are not always able to identify victims at all, or they do not recognise them as victims of trafficking.
The new Ombudsman for Minorities, who was appointed last month (see article) submitted her first report on human trafficking to Parliament on Wednesday.
Particularly in cases of prostitution, the victims of exploitation are rarely identified in Finland, the report notes.
Human trafficking means the exploitation of a position of vulnerability of persons for the purposes of prostitution or forced labour, or any other form of slavery.
For example, the victims of the illegal trade in human beings may have been transported from abroad by means of coercion and deception, whereafter they have ended up working in poor conditions, being paid too low wages, having to work too many hours a day, or having their freedom to move restricted.
Previously in HS International Edition:

Links:



Helsingin Sanomat - International Edition - Home
Source: Helsingin Sanomat
Related articles
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- Preventing Human Trafficking is All About Location, Location, Location (bigthink.com)
Monday, April 4, 2011
Project SECLUSION: Summary of Findings | Sex Trafficking Must End - Hope for the Sold
by Michelle Brock on April 3, 2011
Several months ago I received a report from the Human Trafficking National Coordination Centre known as Project SECLUSION. It is a national overview of trafficking operations in Canada and addresses organized crime involvement, transnational associations, source countries, and challenges faced by law enforcement. It is not intended to be a guide on how to investigate human trafficking but serves as a baseline tool in enforcement efforts. Here are some key findings:
- Human trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation has been mostly associated with organized prostitution occurring discreetly behind fronts, like escort agencies and residential brothels. These are extremely difficult for law enforcement to detect without proactive investigations.
- Human trafficking suspects usually share similar ethnicity with their associates and have ethnic ties to source countries of their migrant workers.
- Many human trafficking suspects have been linked to other organized criminal activities, such as conspiracy to commit murder, credit card fraud, mortgage fraud, immigration fraud, and organized prostitution, in Canada or abroad.
- Organized crime networks with Eastern European links have been involved in the organized entry of women from former Soviet States into Canada for employment in escort services in the Greater Toronto Area and possibly in massage and escort services in the Montreal area. These groups have demonstrated transnational capabilities and significant associations with convicted human traffickers in the Czech Republic, Germany, Belarus, and Israel.
- Domestic human trafficking victims have mostly been recruited through the internet or by an acquaintance. The victims were groomed, manipulated, and coerced to enter the sex trade.
- Some victims of domestic trafficking have been underage girls exploited through prostitution in exotic dance clubs and/or escort services. Control tactics employed by traffickers to retain victims in exploitative situations include social isolation, forcible confinement, withholding identification documents, imposing strict rules, limitation of movement, as well as threats and violence.
- African nationals who were identified as victims of human trafficking were trafficked for sexual exploitation outside of and before arriving to Canada.
You can download the entire PDF report here: SECLUSION_Unclassified_EN Final version
I am also currently reading another article that specifically focuses on methodology of trafficking research and what approaches Canada must take when measuring this clandestine activity. This will be particulatly helpful for those of you getting into trafficking research. Summary of that coming soon!
Project SECLUSION: Summary of Findings | Sex Trafficking Must End - Hope for the Sold
Source: hopeforthesold.com/
Related articles
- The horror of human trafficking, the "modern form of slavery" (leftfootforward.org)
- Modern Day Slavery (fourbluehills.com)
- Victims of the 'unimaginable' speak out (msnbc.msn.com)