3. 5 Essential Questions
ď§ 1.What do they do to the victims of Human
Trafficking?
ď§ 2.When did it Start?
ď§ 3.Who are the targets of this crime
ď§ 4.Why do the people do this?
ď§ 5.Where are the hot spots of Human
Trafficking?
4. ď¨ Slavery
civil relationship where
by one person has absolute power over another and
controls his life, liberty, and fortune.
ď¨ Exploitation
to take advantage of (a person, situation, etc),
esp. unethically or unjustly for one's own ends.
ď¨ Oppression
the exercise of authority or power in a burdensome, cru
el, or unjust manner.
5. History
ď¨ No starting date
ď¨ British Settlers
ď¤ African slave trade
ď¨ Slave Trade
ď¤ $$$$
ď¤ Nations and
colonies were built
on
ď¨ Britain
ď¤ Banned 1807
ď¤ Abolished 1833
ď¤ Anti-slavery
policies
6. History II- White Slavery
⢠Woman and children
⢠Prostitution
⢠International
⢠Sex slaves to rich
⢠World War II
⢠1980
⢠Taken seriously
⢠Control sex tourism
7. Human Trafficking
(Effects Today)
ď Popular topic
ď Grant money given out
ď 600-800,000 people
ď Children- worst conditions
ď Commercial sex trade
ď 15,000 people within own borders
18. ď˘ Advisor
ď˘ VP Global centurion
ď˘ Fight world slavery
ď˘ Written books
ď˘ Organization
ď˘ Doctors at was against
human trafficking
Dr. Laura Lederer
Important People
19. ď˘ Stop prostitution
ď˘ Truckers take a stand
ď˘ $5.00
ď˘ How can you help
ď˘ Hotline
1-888-373-7888
ď˘ Video
Truckers Against Trafficking
20. ⢠Founded in 2002
⢠Stop Human trafficking
⢠Strengthening laws
⢠Training future leaders
⢠Anti- Trafficking movement
⢠Hot Line
- 1-888-3737-888
âFOR A WORLD WITHOUT SLAVERYâ
22. T.V.P.A. (Goals)
⢠Prevent human trafficking over seas
⢠Help protect victims
⢠Help rebuild victims
⢠Prosecute traffickers
⢠Elimination of Human rights violators around
the world
24. ď˝ Popular topic
ď˝ Grant money given out
ď˝ 600-800,000 people
ď˝ Children- worst conditions
⌠Commercial sex trade
ď˝ 15,000 people within own borders
25. ď˝ Prevent human trafficking over seas
ď˝ Help protect victims
ď˝ Help rebuild victims
ď˝ Prosecute traffickers
ď˝ Elimination of Human rights violators around
the world
26. ď Results in death
ďĄ Could be sentenced to life in prison
ď Involves kidnapping, attempted kidnapping,
aggravated sexual abuse, attempted sexual
abuse, attempt to kill
ďĄ Could be sentenced to life in prison
ď Sexual trafficking
ďĄ Children (under age of 14)
ď˘ imprisonment for life
ďĄ Child between age of 14 and 18
ď˘ 20 years in prison
27. ď Most Common Trafficking
ď 2nd most common Trafficking
ď 1 out of 5
ď Children
28. Who takes the people
⢠Drug Cartels
⢠Club owners
⢠Money lenders
29. What is the reason?
⢠Cheap labor
⢠Past debts
⢠Crazy
34. ď Fifteen year old runaway girl
ď Sixteen year old girl
ď Evans family
ď 9 young folk dancers
35. Current Events
ď¨ Law in California
ď¨ Putting to action
ď¨ Taxes Governor human trafficking
meeting
ď¨ Man guilty 14 state human
trafficking ring
36. 5 essential Qâs & AâS
1. What happened to the people that are trafficked?
A lot of bad things happen to them, they either get
sold into slavery, into prostitution, and raped and
then killed usually
37. 5 Essential Qâs & Aâs
2. When did it start?
Since its modern day slavery you could say its been
around for forever but this its really picked in the 17th
century
38. 5 Essential Qâs & Aâs
3.Who do they traffic?
There mostly young girls in their late teens and
then just children
39. 5 Essntial Qâs & Aâs
4. How many people are trafficked in the US each year?
Around 800,000 people each year
40. 5 Essential Qâs & Aâs
5. Where are the main places this takes place?
Russia ,Vietnam, and Somalia
41. Books/Movies Sites
ď http://www.unicef.org/events/yokohama/outcome.html
ď http://www.unicef.org/newsline/01pr97.htm
ď http://www.unicef.org/events/yokohama/outcome.html
ď http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=200911201441
09AAPuHzO
ď http://www.nyc.gov/html/endht/html/trafficking/studies.sht
ml
ď http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/22/usc_sup_01_22_10_7
8.html
ď http://www.acf.hhs.gov/trafficking/about/TVPA_2000.pdf
ď http://www.pbs.org/wnet/justice/law_background_torture.ht
ml
ď http://www.freelegaladvicehelp.com/criminal-
ď http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/human-trafficking/what-is-
human-trafficking.html
ď http://www.co.ramsey.mn.us/NR/rdonlyres/E4B3303E-AF48-
4DCC-98D1-
A31347E96721/4942/HumanTraffickingTodaysHiddenSlavery.
pdf
ď http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_trafficking
ď http://www.unicef.org/media/media_9330.html
Bibliography
Human Trafficking: By Maggy
Lee
The War on Human Trafficking:
By Anthony M. DeStefano
Human Trafficking: Global
Perspective: By Louise Shelly
Human trafficking, or modern-day slavery, is the fastest growing criminal industry in the world. Trafficking involves exploiting people for sex or laborThis act affects everyone I could be kidnapped tomorrow anthreat or use of force, fraud, or coercion. Coercion means to compel by force, intimidation, or authority, esp. without regard for individual desire or volition:Everyone is affected by this children, adults small, big
This is the main part of trafficking and is were the most money is made They would kidnap the people most of the time they would be children in their teenage years. 12-14There life is horrible a lot of them end up committing suicide so you can guess how horrible It is
UNICEF supports a lot of organizations that help prevent Sexual Exploitation of children.
DR. LAURA LEDERER  former State Department Advisor on Human Trafficking and Vice President of Global Centurion, an organization designed to fight world slavery, has stated that, "Over the last 10 years, the numbers of women and children [who] have been trafficked have multiplied so that they are now on par with estimates of the numbers of Africans who were enslaved in the 16th and 17th centuries." Over the past decade, the trafficking of human beings has reached epidemic proportions, with 1.2 million children becoming new victims of human trafficking every year. In the U.S., the average victim of abduction is an 11-year-old girl.
The Polaris Project was founded in 2002. they are not just for stopping prostitution and being abused but also modern day slavery. The Polaris project is trying to strengthen state and federal laws to help stop Human trafficking. They are also starting to Train our future leaders about the anti-trafficking movement.
The most common form of human trafficking is sexual exploitation, at 79 percent.The second most common form of human trafficking is forced labor, or slavery, making up 18 percent of the total, although the writers of the report say it may be underreported. 1 out of 5 are children "Children's nimble fingers are exploited to untangle fishing nets, sew luxury goods or pick cocoa," the report said. "Their innocence is abused for begging, or exploited for sex as prostitutes, pedophilia or child pornography. Others are sold as child brides or camel jockeys.â Brick making and would work 12 hour days if they didnât meet the quota they were beat. Would have to make about 1000 a day. Making cigarettes and if they didnât meet the quota there fingers were beat.c
Drug Cartels kidnap people and use them to smuggle drugs into the US so there people arenât in danger.Club Owners this is not as common but the would blackmail tourists and make them work in there clubs of all sortsMoney Lender when a family cant pay the money lender they would have to sell their child so they would go work with the money lender to pay off the debt and getting as little a couple cents a day
Its modern day slavery and they donât pay them and they sometimes blackmail them into doing what they say.A money lender would force the family to sell their son or daughter to them to work for the moneylender to work off debt.Sometimes the people are just crazy and do it for the fun of it and they have no real reason to do it other than to take people and make them so obscene acts.
Intimidate- they would threaten them like saying that they would kill there family. Kidnap- they would kidnap them and then threaten to make them stayBrainwash- get them addicted to drugs so they would have to stay with their captors to get the drugs.
Two Ukraine girls come to America and a club owner kidnaps them and tells them that if they donât work for him that heâll kill their family
YeseniaYesenia M., a young woman from Mexico, was brought to the United States at age 17 to work as a babysitter for Mr. Sanchez. Mr. Sanchez was also from Mexico, but he had come to the United States years earlier to start a furniture business. He married an American woman and had two young children. Mr. Sanchez travelled to Mexico and met Yesenia when she was working for her family business selling groceries. He complimented her on her professionalism and offered her a job taking care of his two young children in the United States. He discussed the opportunity with her family, and they all agreed that she would come to the United States and work as a nanny for the family. Mr. Sanchez arranged for her travel, and she arrived in the United States soon after. Her tasks included cooking, cleaning, bathing the children, laundry, and yard work. Yesenia did not have her own room and seldom had a moment's rest. The job had turned out to be something very different from what she expected. She was not paid for her work and was not allowed to speak to anyone outside the family. Yesenia also endured three incidents of sexual abuse and rape by Mr. Sanchez, who drugged her and took advantage of her. Desperate to leave her miserable situation, Yesenia befriended a woman at church who helped her escape from her trafficker. Once Yesenia escaped, she was determined to bring her trafficker to justice by contacting the appropriate authorities and cooperating in the investigation. Mr. Sanchez was arrested and prosecuted for rape and human trafficking. He received a prison sentence, had to forfeit property, and will be deported upon finishing his sentence. Yesenia now has a T visa, a nonimmigrant status visa for victims of human trafficking, and is attending college.
will allow courts to seize houses or vehicles used for human trafficking. The bill will also allow for civil penalties of up to $25,000. was signed in the end of September