Trafficking at a glance
- Human trafficking affects 20 million men, women, and children worldwide.
- There are 5.5 million child victims of trafficking.
- Trafficking is extremely profitable with $150 billion in yearly profits; $99 billion of this is from commercial sexual exploitation.
- Trafficking affects 161 countries worldwide.
Human trafficking affects more than 20 million men, women, and children worldwide, five and a half million of whom are children. Human traffickers have created an international market for the trade in human beings based on high profits and demand for commercial sex and cheap labor. Trafficking affects 161 countries worldwide. Trafficking is an extremely profitable industry with $150 billion in yearly profits; $99 billion of this is from commercial sexual exploitation.
While the majority of victims are trafficked by organized crime groups, employment agencies, and strangers, many are recruited by relatives and friends. Women are often recruited for ostensibly legitimate work, and subsequently sold into slavery. Some victims are on student visas, others are documented workers who have their passport confiscated and become refugees with no status and nowhere to turn for help.
What needs to be done to stop this horrific crime?
- Greater funding
- More public outreach
- Build awareness
- Public education in schools
- Hospitality industry – training of bell men and staff in hotels and motels
- Better legislation
- Curb demand by strengthening laws to punish buyers
- Laws to criminalize the third party that commissions trafficking
- Greater enforcement of current laws
- Stronger partnerships with civil services
- Interagency coordination of labor, health, and child welfare organizations
- Greater coordination with non-profit governmental agencies and governments abroad
- Stopping the money trail
- Financial institutions are beginning to recognize patterns of spending on prepaid credit cards to track down traffickers
- Training of judges to recognize victims fear in testifying against trafficker
- Cases need to be victim focused but not victim dependent
- Greater corporate responsibility
- Working with human resource departments to ensure that each layer of the organization is free of slave labor
What can you do to help?
- Know your slavery footprint: Purchase fair trade products and be aware of the footprint of your purchases: If you work for a corporation, especially in a senior role, demand greater regulation of the supply chain. Know who is working for your company and how it is getting sourced. Does slave labor play a role? For more information, check out www.slaveryfootprint.org.
- Get involved: Provide financial contributions and/or volunteer to help organizations dedicated to stopping gender-based violence, such as sex trafficking, and to helping victims
- Curb demand: Help curb demand by leading by example and not propagating stereotypes of women, through the media and programming you support and conversations in which you engage.
- Spread the word: Help spread the word that violence against women is unacceptable. See the Real Men Campaign which asks men to send out the message that Real men do not abuse and control women – physically, emotionally, sexually or financially.