Human trafficking doesn’t happen in third world countries only. It doesn’t just happen to poor people and it certainly doesn’t solely happen to women. It is present here in the USA but it is hidden, and even worse, so are their victims. They are everywhere yet invisible. They are silently crying for our help through their eyes and smiles. According to Polaris, “…the prevalence of sex trafficking in the United States is still unknown, we do know that women, children, and men are being sold for sex against their will in cities and towns in all 50 states”. Human trafficking can happen to anyone even to Theresa Flores, the author of “The slave across the street”(“Sex trafficking” 2015). An average 15 year old American girl, coming from a privileged background and a respected family became a victim of sex trafficking and through her book, she convinces us that human trafficking doesn’t have a specific demographic.
Theresa was a good catholic girl. Her faith was important to her. She went to mass on Sundays, her mom was very involved in the community and her dad had a very important job. Her family was the normal American family. Her dad’s job required them to move around a lot and because of that she never had true friendships. One day her family moved to Birmingham and her life changed dramatically.
In her new school, Theresa had a crush on an older Chaldean boy named Daniel, little did she know that that this innocent crush will turn her life into nightmare. Chaldeans had a
In 2010, there were almost 30,000 Latino immigrants in Durham, ninety percent of which were undocumented immigrants (Johnson). Initially, most Latino immigrants arrived in the southwest, but since the turn of the century, more have settled in new destinations, such as Durham, and other parts of the Southeast, due to opportunities to work in low-skilled jobs.
Human trafficking is an issue that no one really wants to talk about. The media portrays this horrible crime as something that only happens in foreign lands. Americans do not want to believe that something so heinous could happen on our own soil. However when survivors of human trafficking come forward, people are forced to confront the reality that this issue is not that far from home. Some individuals still choose to deny that this is a real issue. However the facts make it extremely hard to deny that human trafficking happens on American soil.
The trafficking of human beings for slave labor and sexual exploitation is one of the fastest growing global problems. It has been called the "dark side of globalization" because an enormous upsurge of human enslavement has accompanied a border-free world economy (Miller). Trafficking in persons is a transnational crime that touches people in every nation, and even neighborhoods in this country. The vast reach of human trafficking stunned my own community, when we learned that a 12-year-old Egyptian girl was imprisoned as a domestic slave in the garage of a family home in Irvine, California. Like many victims of trafficking, she was sold by impoverished parents and transported illegally across international borders. While in captivity, she
Human trafficking has been in existence in several states for many years. It is a form of slavery where people can be transported from one place to another for exploitation in farms, being forced into criminal activities such as terrorism, forced marriages, sexual abuse, prostitution among other forms of illicit activities (Butler, 2015). The trafficked individuals are often oppressed through violence, threats or coercion which forces the individuals to be involved in various things which they could not be willing to conduct. Majorly, members of the African continent have been widely bound to human trafficking. However, the ordeal has expanded even to trafficking within members of the same state.
Looking the other way while close to 50% of the human trafficking in the United States end up in prostitution, what is going on in these states. The over sexed country does not help to stop it when we constantly promote sex in almost every aspect of life. People are losing their life to find a way to get to the United States through different forms of smuggling. Are these the people that we should be letting get in this country?
Slavery is when persons are owned and controlled by other persons, and they have little to no freedom. In Eastern Europe slavery ended in 1528, but human trafficking has been going on for thousands of years. A few decrees did not stop the horrible crime called human trafficking. By definition human trafficking is modern day slavery; people that are victims are imprisoned and worked until they are physically unable to any longer. Many people turn a blind eye to human trafficking. Despite the minimal efforts of various governments Eastern European human trafficking is on the rise, leading to an increase in the economic exploration of the victims of human trafficking.
Also, there is the matter of trust and fear. Victims are often, for example, frightened to believe they can accept help without owing something back. Some survivors are too afraid because they fear their traffickers too much to accept any services. Furthermore, it aggravates victims to find out that the time is takes for cases to be prosecuted and to gain protections is very extensive. Intensifying the existing laws to better defend human trafficking victims is critical.The United States Government, in 2000, certified the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act. This act helps prosecute traffickers and support victims. Since then the number of recognized victims of trafficking has risen as well as trials and social service providers working with survivors. Because of this it gives researchers an opportunity to track and study the issue deeper and come up with new solutions (Family Violence Prevention Fund, 2005).
It should be noted that human trafficking implies the circumstance when a living individual is either treated or considered as a commodity which can be leased, donated, exchange, brought, sold, or even pledged (Kempadoo, Sanghera & Pattanaik, 2015). Therefore, regardless of the condition and the person involved and for what reason carries out the act of trafficking, regarding a man as a question of exchange is a criminal offense in all nations. Lee (2013) argues that aggravating conditions incorporate the commission of the represent the evacuation of tissues or body organs, the utilization of brutality or risk of viciousness, canceling, removing and destroying records that would be used in recognizing the casualty. Additionally, the use of forged information to move people across national borders, persuasive repression abroad, and
Human trafficking has always been a though subject. Most Americans prefer to believe that this is a problem of the past, that it simply does not occur anymore. Others accept the fact that human trafficking exist, but in a far away reality, an incident homed only in poor, third world countries. This couldn’t be farther away from the truth. Human trafficking is a real and current problem in the United States, California being a hotspot for this issue, and with the Super Bowl in 2016 the problem will only get worse.
The love that Theresa has for her son is represented in many ways, one of which being her determination to fight against corruption. She is a single mother living in South Central Los Angeles who wants to see a change within her community after her nephew Tiny is killed in a drive-by constructed by undercover police. Her son Dwayne gives her the idea to create an organization to help fight against the abuse of authority from the LAPD by bringing the gang members living in their project together. “Dwayne
The Republic of Cabo Verde, also known as Cape Verde, is the Small Island Developing States in which characterized by isolation, prone to natural disasters, repetition of drought, and small business size. According to African Development Bank (2016), weak global economy and domestic vulnerability cause Cape Verde’s economic recovery remains frail. Cape Verde's economy is limited by the difficulties of limited area of island, the lack of mineral resources, and rainfall deficiency; these difficulties vanish the idea of agricultural and natural resources production. As a result, the business tourism, tourism-related foreign investment, and remittance are major contribution to the country’s economy. As tourism has increased since 2013, domestic
Human trafficking has been a dangerous industry in the united States for many years. Human/Sex trafficking is a form of slavery that involves the use of force, fraud, or coercion to obtain some type of sex or labor. In the 1980’s when The Slave Across the Street by Theresa Flores took place and in the 1990’s when Girls Like Us by Rachel Lloyd took place, sex trafficking was a foreign term to most Americans even though it was a practiced activity. The National Human Trafficking Resource Center stated that in the United States there were more than 4,000 sex trafficking cases reported (Alvarez). On the years following that number has grown tremendously. "The Department of Justice has cited the legislation after a bump in trafficking investigations
Today, there are more slaves on the planet than at any other point in history; an alarming statistic that has not gotten the popular media spotlight it needs. What’s worse is these slaves are still being sold as commodities and trafficked on the market for their labor and sexual exploitation. If modern slavery is more prominent now than ever before, it begs the question of what multinational organizations are doing to quell this borderless crime.
The topic of my choice for my research paper is Human Trafficking. The reason I choose this topic is hundreds and thousands of women and children are sold each year in the brothels of India. These people are all poorly educated and very poor. Hundreds and thousands of men and women are also lured to the Middle Eastern countries and South East Asia with the offer of lucrative jobs and salary to do household chores and factory works and are treated like modern day slaves.
by that particular government because of the communism that country may have. As the in the U.S. the Department of Health and Human Services is provided to help the women and girls who have or still are in the human trafficking industries. They are provided with the help of a person that may lead them down through the trauma they have experienced throughout the captivity of their traffickers and also in some cases they will be helped in educational programs where they can start a job. Now as in the cases of the traffickers they they may never be found by U.S. government because of their connections in some cases this traffickers have connection with the own government which may make it harder for them to be found. If they are captured they may have to deal with many consequences because of the illegal work they have done in the process of kidnapping and illegal transportation into the U.S. along with many other charges and many years of jail.