Human Trafficking: What You Need to Know – Labor Trafficking
This session will offer insight into where and how labor trafficking occurs and include a discussion about the impact of consumer choice in preventing labor trafficking.
DetailsEvery crisis makes people more vulnerable to labor and sex trafficking because of the disruptions to daily life – whether it is the loss of a home, job or access to health care or being unable to connect with support networks of friends and co-workers. These disruptions are especially devastating to those who are already vulnerable and hanging on financially. They become desperate for any way to earn money and survive.
As one trafficking survivor said recently, “Before COVID-19, we were ‘low-wage, low-skilled’ workers, but now, we are ‘essential.’”
However, this new label, “essential,” has not resulted in better pay or job security — quite the opposite, and this is where traffickers can enter the picture.
This session will offer insight into where and how labor trafficking occurs and include a discussion about the impact of consumer choice in preventing labor trafficking.
DetailsThe Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) is hosting a webinar on human trafficking prevention and supporting victims from 3-4:30 p.m. ET on Sept. 23, 2019.
DetailsSTAC’s monthly training for September includes a special focus on the civil and legal needs of human trafficking survivors and family law.
DetailsRecognize common indicators and “red flags.” Discuss the approach for a patient who is a suspected victim of trafficking.
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