What’s Our Responsibility? How Individuals and Organizations Can Proactively Address Human Trafficking

  • Gray G
  • Crowl H
  • Snow K
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Abstract

Human trafficking is regarded by Interpol as the second largest and fastest growing criminal industry in the world. This letter is submitted in response to the topic of Human Trafficking addressed in Volume 2, Issue 1. In response to the ever-increasing attention to this problem, various programs focus on the rescue of survivors in anti-trafficking efforts - sometimes overshadowing efforts to prevent human trafficking and rehabilitate those harmed. A comprehensive, responsible approach requires a system of rescue and rehabilitation with a deliberate eye toward prevention. The basic human rights of survivors are at risk of being violated by “so-called rescue missions, despite the good intentions of would-be rescuers.” At the prevention level, a firm human rights approach is needed. When interventions shift their emphasis to prevention and tackle the innate contributors to inequality, then the roots of trafficking and slavery can be firmly extirpated. By taking a thoughtful and vested approach to tackling all areas of trafficking— including prevention, rescue, and rehabilitation—resources can be used more effectively, and communities are likely to have a more extensive impact in the fight against this hideous crime against humanity.

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Gray, G., Crowl, H., & Snow, K. (2012). What’s Our Responsibility? How Individuals and Organizations Can Proactively Address Human Trafficking. Journal of Applied Research on Children: Informing Policy for Children at Risk, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.58464/2155-5834.1073

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