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Global Centurion: April Newsletter

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A�GCF Serving as Subject Matter Expert to the Department of Defense


One of the most horrific abuses we encounter in our work atA�Global Centurion FoundationA�(GCF) is when those entrusted to protect and defend wittingly or unwittingly exploit and abuse the most vulnerable among us.

These tragedies often serve as a wake-up call for the government agency, private corporation or other institution involved, but when such cases emerge, each of these entities have a choice to make: will they turn a blind eye to the abuse or will they invest in developing effective measures to protect potential victims and prevent further abuse?

Earlier this year, GCF began serving as a Subject Matter Expert for the Combating Trafficking in Persons Office in the Department of Defense. A�In this role, we are assisting in updating the Departmenta��s General Awareness Training which is given to all four branches of service.A� In addition, we are helping to develop training programs for DoD Contracts and Acquisitions Offices.A� Finally, we are assisting in creating a specialized training for DoD Law Enforcement, such as military police and other military criminal investigators. A�Stay tuned for more information about this important work, and news in May about several pieces of new legislation aimed at preventing labor trafficking in government contracting.

 

GCF In the News: Human Trafficking and Foster Care…Connecting the Dots

 

Earlier this month, Global Centurion Foundation was featured inA�Foster Focus Magazine, the nation’s only monthly magazine focused on Foster Care. A�As GCF President Dr. Laura Lederer, J.D. shared with the magazine, “The whole point of human trafficking is to generate a profit. A�It’s a business. A�If there was no profit in it, the people who now profit from human trafficking would find another way to generate revenue.” A�To gain access to the full articleA�click HERE.

 

 

 

 

Support the 2013 Norma Hotaling Awards

For the past four years, Global Centurion has recognized individuals and organizations in three areas of anti-trafficking work: 1) survivor-centered service providers; 2) innovative work to curb demand; and, 3) policy work addressing systemic change. A�In this way we hope to honor and remember Norma, and at the same time, support and recognize the work of abolitionists here in the U.S. and Canada who are carrying on in her vision.

Do you know someone who is a leader in the fight against modern slavery? A�If so, we are currently accepting applications for this year’s recipients. A�Find out more here >>

Would you consider supporting these important awards with a gift of any amount? A�Every year, we are proud that these funds have been raised from individuals, advocates and organizations across the United States. A�Give here >>A�

 

 

Upcoming Events


Global Centurion Foundation President and Founder Laura J. Lederer will be speaking at a number of events focused on global anti-trafficking efforts including the 2013 Breaking Free Demand Change Conference in St. Paul, MN. A�To read about or register for this and other GCF events,A�please visit our calendar.

 

Support GCF Today!

Throughout 2013, GCF seeks to greatly expand our efforts to fight modern day slavery by focusing on demand. A�Your tax-deductible gift of any amount will directly support GCFa��s demand-focused initiatives both here and abroad. A�Give Today >>


Global Centurion: May Newsletter

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A�New Laws Take Aim at Human Trafficking in Government Contracting


Although federal government contractors have long been prohibited from engaging in human trafficking, in recent years, allegations of labor trafficking and sex trafficking in federal contracting have surfaced.[1]A�A� In Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. government, particularly Department of Defense (DoD) and Department of State (DoS), have need of a large labor pool for support services for our military and embassy.

DoD and DoS contract with U.S. companies, who become the prime contractors for providing this labor pool.A� The prime contractors often subcontract with companies headquartered in other countries.A� To cut costs and maximize profits, these subcontractors then sub-sub contract with companies using unlicensed brokers and recruiters to obtain laborers for large service contracts.A� The laborers are promised good jobs in resource rich countries but then are trafficked into war torn or resource poor countries where they are in virtual slave labor. In this way, the US government and its prime contractors have been implicated in human trafficking, including labor trafficking, sex trafficking, and related crimes.A� In some cases the allegations have been egregious:A� laborers have been forced into debt bondage to obtain jobs; their passports are taken and held so they cannot leave; their salaries are delayed, withheld, or not paid at all; they are housed in dilapidated conditions, such as one case where nearly 1000 workers were in close quarters in a warehouse with one meal a day and not enough water for over a month.

Both the 2013 Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) and the 2013 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) create new contractor obligations with respect to detecting and preventing human trafficking.A� Specifically, the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for FY2013 includes comprehensive safeguards to target coercive labor practices that were not previously part of anti-trafficking practices, for instance, prohibiting contractors and subcontractors from:

  1. Destroying or denying employees access to their identifying documents;
  2. Using misleading or fraudulent recruitment practices; and,
  3. Providing substandard housing pursuant to host country standards.A�A� Contractors and subcontractors whose contract value exceeds $500,000, must have a anti-trafficking plan in place and implement a procedures to prevent, monitor, detect and terminate any subcontractor, employee or agent engaged in any of the prohibited activities.[2]

As reported in last montha��s newsletter, Global Centurion Foundation is currently serving as Subject Matter Expert to the DoDa��s Combating Trafficking in Person Office (CTIP) to assist the Department in creating a five-year strategic plan to address human trafficking. (To read the 2013 TVPA clickA�HEREA�and to read the full NDAA, clickA�HERE.)

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[1]A�SeeA�National Security Presidential Directive 22A�and theA�TVPRA 2005, Sec. 103. Part II of title 18, Chapter 212A, Sections 3271 and 3272,A�which had the first provision specifically addressing trafficking in government contracting. A�For a list of recent cases and allegations, contact Global Centurion Foundation.

[2]A�See NDAA Section 17.

 

GCF Educational Curriculum for Middle and High School Students

Global Centurion Foundation has created a basic introduction to and overview of human trafficking for middle school and high school children and teens. A key component of the curriculum is a focus on demand reduction.A� The curriculum describes various types of human trafficking (sex trafficking and labor trafficking; international and domestic trafficking; adult and child trafficking).

The course introduces students to international, foreign national and U.S. law and policy on human trafficking, how to identify victims, and common health concerns among trafficking victims as background for a demand-related approach. The primary purpose of the program is to create age-appropriate modules to reach young men and boys a�� and young women and girls –to help them make informed choices and reduce the demand.A� The curriculum includes a syllabus, teacher-training manual, basic materials and exercises, special in-class and extra-curricular projects; and, inter-active media technologies activities. Stay tuned for information later this year about our pilot of this program.

 

Do You Know the Next Norma Hotaling Award Recipient?

For the past four years, Global Centurion Foundation has recognized individuals and organizations in three areas of anti-trafficking work:

  1. Survivor-centered service providers;
  2. Innovative work to curb demand; and,
  3. Policy work addressing systemic change.

In this way we hope to honor and remember Norma Hotaling, who was a survivor of sex trafficking and an innovator of programs to help address sex trafficking.A� At the same time, support and recognize the work of abolitionists here in the U.S. and Canada who are carrying on in her vision.

Do you know someone who is a leader in the fight against modern slavery? A�We are currently accepting applications for this year’s recipients.A�A�A�Find out more here >>

 

 

 

Upcoming Events


Global Centurion Foundation President and Founder Laura J. Lederer, J.D. will be speaking at a number of events focused on global anti-trafficking efforts including the 2013 Trafficking in America Conference in Nashville. A�To read about or register for this and other GCF events,A�please visit our calendar.

Support Our Anti-Trafficking Efforts Today!

Throughout 2013, GCF seeks to greatly expand our efforts to fight modern day slavery by focusing on demand. A�Your tax-deductible gift of any amount will directly support GCFa��s demand-focused initiatives both here and abroad. A�Give Today >>

Global Centurion: June Newsletter

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Do You Know the Next Norma Hotaling Award Recipient?

A�Norma Hotaling (1951-2008), founder of SAGE, transcended homelessness, A�addiction and prostitution to transform her suffering into opportunity and hope for A�others. A�Trafficked into prostitution as a child, she remained trapped in the sex A�industry for eighteen years. By sheer personal will, she overcame the vicious cycle A�of violence, abuse, and exploitation.

Determined to create exit strategies for others like her, she spent the next eighteen A�years of her life creating a safe haven for victims of prostitution and sex trafficking. A�She also called attention to inequities in the criminal justice system and focused on A�the demand side of sex trafficking by developing new programs and policies for men A�and boys.

To commemorate the anniversary of her passing on December 17th 2008, we offer A�three awards paying tribute to Normaa��s legacy and recognizing individuals A�continuing her lifea��s work. To find our more about these awards and to nominate a A�potential 2013 NHA recipient,A�please visit our site here.A� Together we can celebrate A�Norma and honor those who are carrying on her vision.

 

Global Centurion Foundation Honored as Capital City Ball Beneficiary

A�For the second year in a row, Global Centurion Foundation has A�been selected as one of three charities to be honored at A�Washington D.C.a��s premier anti-trafficking gala, the Capital City A�Ball.A� The concept for the Capital City Ball was created in A�September 2007 by a group of DC area professionals who saw A�an opportunity to create a high caliber, annual black tie party A�held the weekend before Thanksgiving.

The goals of the Capital City Ball are simple: host a top notch party, make sure the guests have a good time, and raise money and awareness for leading anti-trafficking organizations.

This is a fantastic event, and we hope you will visit theA�Capital City Ball websiteA�to learn more orA�contact usA�if you would like to donate an auction item, sponsor a table or become a supporter on behalf of Global Centurion Foundation.A� Stay tuned for more information about this event!

New Campaign Targets Demand

A�Earlier this year, Free the Captives launched a new a�?Reducing A�the Demanda�? marketing campaign, targeting the Johns by A�unveiling aA�commercialA�that will air on television this summer. A�In this commercial, Sheriff Garcia makes it clear that men who A�purchase women and girls will no longer be tolerated in Harris A�County. Besides television, the marketing campaign includes A�radio PSAs and billboards, which highlight that when you buy A�sex you are fueling human trafficking. You can help learn more A�about sponsoring one of Free the Captivesa�� demand-focused A�anti-trafficking billboardsA�here.

 

2013 Trafficking In Persons Report Released

A�Earlier this month, the United States Department of State released the 2013 Trafficking in A�Persons (TIP) Report, one of our governmenta��s principal diplomatic tools used to engage A�foreign governments on human trafficking.A� The 2013 TIP Report follows the tradition of the A�past decade of reports, placing countries into one of three tiers based on the extent of their A�governmenta��s efforts to comply with the minimum standards for eliminating human trafficking, A�found in Section 108 of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act.A� The report represents an A�updated, global snapshot of the nature and scope of trafficking in persons and the wide variety A�of government and non-government actions available to reduce human trafficking A�worldwide.A�A�Visit the State Departmenta��s Trafficking in Persons Office to read more about this A�important resource.

The New Prostitutes?

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Dear Global Centurion Foundation friends, we wanted to highlight a Letter to the Editor from Melissa Farley, Ph.D., Executive Director, Prostitution Research & Education, to the New York Times, regarding Robert Kolker’s article “The New Prostitutes”. A�Please share her thoughtful reply to your circles.

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To the Editor, New York Times,
July 2, 2013

There are no “new prostitutes” as Robert Kolker puts it.A�Instead, there are new techniques to sell women for sex.A� There arenew technologies that facilitate trafficking for prostitution.A�Today 80-90% of prostitution is advertised online, but prostitution isthe same oppression as ever. Almost all women want to get out ofprostitution which is the business of sexual exploitation.A�Prostitution feeds off of women’s lack of survival alternatives.A�Women want out because of the sexual harassment,A� the verbal abuse,the rapes, and because as one woman prostituting legally in Nevada said,”no one really wants to be sold.”

How about investigating the cutting edge laws that criminalize buying aperson for sex, as in Sweden.A� This has resulted in the lowest rateof trafficking in Europe.A� Sex buyers, still largely sociallyinvisible, are becoming legally targeted by communities that recognizewhat some of us see:A� buying sex is a predatory activity predicatedon inequality between men and women.

Melissa Farley, Ph.D., Executive Director
Prostitution Research & Education

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JUNE 29, 2013,A�3:11 PM

The New Prostitutes

The New York Times

ByA�ROBERT KOLKER

Take the Long Hill Road exit off I-95 in eastern Connecticut and curl south toward the waterfront city of Groton and youa��ll find each of the places that briefly employed Maureen Brainard-Barnes. There is the TJ Maxx and the AutoZone and the Stop and Shop. And the Chestera��s chicken counter, where she made the potato wedges. And the shopping center with the Groton Cinema 6, where she picked up discarded snacks from the carpet in exchange for free admission and a bag of popcorn.

In 2005, Ms. Brainard-Barnes was a 22-year-old single mother who had difficulty holding down a steady job. She never could afford her own place, staying with her sister for long stretches and occasionally with a boyfriend. Modeling, she thought, could lead to a music career. As soon as she enrolled on a site calledA�ModelMayhem.com, she received dozens of e-mails from places that purported to be modeling agencies but that, after a few clicks, turned out to mean nude modeling and sometimes working as an escort. She wasna��t thrown by seeing this. What did surprise her was the money.

Within a few months, Ms. Brainard-Barnes was making up to $2,000 a day on trips to New York City. She posted ads on Craigslist and worked out of a hotel room in Midtown for short stretches and then returned home to care for her daughter. After so many years of depending on others, she could leave her responsibilities behind and become another person for a while a�� and she could earn enough money to fulfill those same responsibilities. Online, she could be her own boss and not share what she made with anyone a�� not a pimp, not an escort service, not a boyfriend.

In 2010, Maureen Brainard-Barnesa��s body was one of four uncovered close by one another in the sand dunes of Gilgo Beach, Long Island, wrapped in burlap. Three years later, the Long Island serial killer case remains unsolved, even as six more sets of remains have been discovered nearby along Ocean Parkway and farther east. The first four bodies were identified as women in their 20s a�� just like another woman, Shannan Gilbert, who had disappeared three miles from where the four bodies in burlap were found. These five women clearly had much in common. Maureen Brainard-Barnes, Melissa Barthelemy, Shannan Gilbert, Megan Waterman and Amber Lynn Costello all grew up in struggling towns a long distance from Long Island. And they all were escorts who discovered an easy entree into prostitution online.

It had seemed enough, at first, for some to say that the victims were all prostitutes, practically interchangeable a�� lost souls who were gone, in a sense, long before they actually disappeared. That is a story our culture tells about people like them, a conventional way of thinking about how young girls fall into a life of prostitution: unstable family lives, addiction, neglect.

But in the two years Ia��ve spent learning about the lives of all five women, I have found that they all defied expectations. They were not human-trafficking victims in the classic sense. They stayed close to their families. They all came to New York to take advantage of a growing black market a�� an underground economy that offered them life-changing money, and with a remarkably low barrier to entry. The real temptation wasna��t drugs or alcohol, but the promise of social mobility.

The Web has been the great disrupter of any number of industries, transforming the way people shop for everything, and commercial sex has been no exception. Posting ads online, escorts find clients without ever having to leave home or walk the streets. The method is easier, seductively so, almost like an A.T.M. a�� post an ad, and your phone rings seconds later. That ease clearly doesna��t mitigate the risk of meeting strangers, though it might seem like it to some escorts.

The great transforming feature of the Internet is its anonymity. We all have learned that a person can do practically anything online without even their closest loved ones knowing, from commenting on Yelp or Gawker to selling stolen goods or viewing porn videos. This is as true for the escorts as it was for the clients, who have turned sites like TheEroticReview.com into a sort of Yelp for steady customers of commercial sex. No one has to go to a bad part of town to look for what he wants.

While no one has yet measured exactly how significantly the Internet has increased the number of working escorts, ita��s already clear that many Internet sex workers would never seriously consider working on the street.A�Scott Cunningham, an economist at Baylor University, conducted a survey of 700 sex workers in the United States and Canada. a�?The Internet is augmenting the sex market by bringing in women who would not have entered the sex market without the Internet,a�? he says. In one month chosen at random by Mr. Cunningham a�� May 2009 a�� an average of 1,690 sex-worker ads were posted online every day in the New York City area alone.

All it took to persuade many of these women to enter the field, Mr. Cunningham theorizes, was a little financial pressure, or a�?economic shocks.a�? The explanations for entering escort work, he says, a�?are often surrounding loss of income or increase of expenses they need to cover. A woman told me she was getting a divorce, she had a child, her husband was not going to provide child support. She already had a 40-hour-a-week job. And so her options were, she could get another job and work about 60 hours a week. Or she could do this and see her child more and have more money.a�?

The women of Gilgo Beach all came from parts of the country hit hard by the recession like Buffalo, N.Y., and Portland, Me. a�� places where even if you did well in school, there seemed to be not much of a chance of finding a higher-than-minimum-wage job, much less one with health benefits. Some worked for escort services or walked the streets before turning to the Internet; others got their start online. Using Web sites like Craigslist and Backpage, they all made money that transformed their lives.

Shannan Gilbert worked for a high-end escort service in Jersey City, where the minimum rate was $400 or $500 an hour. But she took home only a third of that. When she switched to Craigslist, she made $1,000 many nights, enough to pay a montha��s rent on her apartment. Melissa Barthelemy abandoned her pimp to be her own boss online, charging $100 for 15 minutes, $150 for a half-hour, $250 for an hour and $1,000 for an overnight stay. She made enough money to come home to Buffalo at Christmastime and take her sister and mother to a spa for massages. a�?You deserve to be pampered,a�? she told them.

Megan Waterman took three- or four-day working trips to Long Island from her home in Portland and made $1,500 on a busy night. And Amber Lynn Costello, a North Carolina native who lived briefly in West Babylon, Long Island, once raised $3,800 in just three days to bail out her boyfriend from jail a�� all, her friends said, from Craigslist.

a�?In the beginning, you make the money, and youa��re making it without the drugs,a�? said her sister Kim Overstreet, who has also worked as an escort. a�?And then you get addicted to the money.a�?

The women werena��t the only ones to have profited. In 2010, Craigslist earned a reported $44.4 million from Adult Services ads, or about a third of the companya��s total revenue (the site had started charging $5 to $10 per posting two years earlier). For a time, some believed that Craigslist and its competitors were doing well by doing good. In 2006, a research team from Princeton and Columbia said that this new wave of prostitutes had a a�?professional and careerist orientation.a�?

Three years later, Mr. Cunningham noted in one study that the Web was drawing different sorts of people into prostitution a�� they were better educated and they were thinner. In 2011, Jennifer Hafer, a researcher at the University of Arkansas, said people embraced online prostitution a�?for many of the same reasons that people enter the conventional job market a�� money, stability, autonomy and even job satisfaction.a�? The Internet, said to be the solution to so many problems, was expected to legitimize the entire field of prostitution, elevate the underclass and make pimps a thing of the past.

OBVIOUSLY, that wasna��t how things turned out for the women of Gilgo Beach. Maureen Brainard-Barnes disappeared in July 2007, last heard from near Penn Station. Melissa Barthelemy was said to be heading by herself to Long Island for an overnight appointment in July 2009. Shannan Gilbert vanished in the middle of a call in Oak Beach on May 1, 2010, in circumstances that still have not been fully explained. A month later, Megan Waterman disappeared after leaving a hotel room in Hauppauge. And in September 2010, Amber Lynn Costello, who didna��t like to leave her house for work, had agreed to an overnight date for $1,500. Many other online escorts have reported incidents of violence. Nearly half of the New York City online escorts surveyed by the Urban Justice Centera��sA�Sex Workers ProjectA�in 2005 said they had been forced by a client to do something they did not want to do, and almost as many said they had been threatened or beaten. (In his research, Mr. Cunningham has found that the escorts who needed the money the most were the ones who lacked the resources and time to properly vet their clients.)

Politicians and law enforcement officials took notice of the problem in 2009, the same year Philip Haynes Markoff was arrested and charged with the murder of a masseuse he met on Craigslist. That same year, the sheriff of Cook County, Illinois, sued Craigslist, calling the site a�?the single largest source of prostitution in the nation.a�?

Of course, if capitalism teaches us anything, ita��s that a demand-heavy market will find a way to thrive no matter what the obstacles. The pressure forced Craigslist to shut down its Adult Services category on Sept. 3, 2010 a�� as it happens, the day after Amber Lynn Costello went missing. Right away, the main competitor to Craigslist, Backpage, experienced an explosion in new escort postings. If community pressure or the threat of litigation sinks Backpage, a dozen more sites like it stand ready to pick up the traffic (and some escorts have never left Craigslist, posting surreptitiously in other categories).

The market doesna��t care if prostitution is right or wrong, empowering or exploitative. The demand sustains human trafficking and under-age escorts engaging in survival sex. Just last month, the social-service organization Covenant House in Midtown Manhattan released the findings of aA�surveyA�it conducted with Fordham University, which found that nearly half of the under-age prostitutes seeking help said they did it because they did not have a place to live.

Escorts face danger not because of the Internet but because theya��re still forced to work underground. In a different world, technology could be harnessed to reduce the dangers of prostitution. The University of Colorado law professor Scott Peppet has floated the possibility of a a�?technology-enabled sex marketa�? where escorts and clients are all pre-vetted and predators are screened out. a�?The law, however, is hostile to such innovation,a�? Professor Peppet writes. a�?It currently criminalizes not just prostitution itself, but activities a�� including technologies a�� that advance or facilitate sex markets.a�? As it stands, escorts online remain invisible, where they are vulnerable to predators.

At the top of the pay scale, technology is delivering on its promise. Workers can increase their hours and their output from home and even work second jobs with more ease than ever. But toward the bottom, anxiety lingers, and the Web enables some people to take risks they never would have imagined. In this way, the women of Gilgo Beach still have something to teach us. The Internet might have made pimps less necessary, but todaya��s escorts are as marginalized as ever, and every bit as vulnerable. The police rarely help them when they are at risk, and they rarely take their disappearances seriously. As far as the authorities are concerned, their profession still seals their fate.

Robert KolkerA�is a contributing editor to New York magazine and the author of the forthcoming book, a�?Lost Girls: An Unsolved American Mystery.a�?

Global Centurion Announces 2013 Norma Hotaling Anti-Trafficking Award Winners

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Global Centurion Foundation is pleased to announce the 2013 winners of the 4th Annual Norma Hotaling Anti-Trafficking Awards. The three awardees for 2013 are Kathleen Mitchell (Founder of DIGNITY House), James Dold (Former Senior Policy Counsel to Polaris Project), and Melissa Farley (Founder of Prostitution Research & Education). Read about them here: 2013 Norma Hotaling Award Recipients

A full Press Release can be found here: 2013 Norma Hotaling Award Recipients – Press Release

Victims Health Survey – Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking

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The Beazley Institute for Health Law and Policy at Loyola University Chicago recently released the Annals, a bi-annual journal covering health law topics.A� In this Winter 2014 issue, Laura Lederer, J.D., President of Global Centurion, and Chris Wetzel, published an article on “The Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking and Their Implications for Identifying Victims in Healthcare Facilities.”

The full article can be found here: The Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking.

Marketplace Research ChartThrough privately funded seed money, Global Centurion Foundation (GCF) developed a simple health questionnaire for trafficking survivors, which demonstrates the short-and long-term health consequences associated with human trafficking, commercial sexual exploitation, prostitution and related activities. These victims are often physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually devastated as a result of this criminal activity, and unfortunately, health institutions in the U.S. are seeing and treating these victims on a regular basis and failing to identify them and catalyze a rescue. Instead, these victims are being medically a�?treateda�? and sent back to their trafficker. As one doctor explained, a�?It is like treating burn victims with salve and a Band-Aid and sending them back into the burning building.a�?

The study collected data from associated focus groups in twelve cities across the United States. The focus groups included 107 participants, all domestic survivors of sex trafficking, ranging in age from 14 to 60. The results of the study detail findings on survivorsa�� physical and mental health issues and summarizes critical issues in the provision of health care for sex trafficking victims. Finally, the study sets forth recommendations for legislators, policymakers, and healthcare professionals to help prevent human trafficking and assist and rescue current trafficking victims.

U.S. Conference of Mayors Adopts Resolution Reducing Demand

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Global Centurion was founded five years ago to help communities think creatively about how to reduce demand for commercial sexual exploitation in order to end human trafficking. Over the last couple of years new NGOs have begun to work on the issue, and now we are beginning to get traction in the public sector too. At their recent annual meeting, the U.S. Conference of Mayors unanimously adopted a resolution, combatting commercial sexual exploitation through comprehensive demand enforcement and prevention, emphasizing the importance of targeting purchasers in the sex trafficking industry.

In light of continuing demand for commercial sex in our country, the U.S. Conference of Mayors has proposed a series of changes in law, law enforcement, and education and awareness programs to address this problem. First, they advocate for legislative change. Specifically, they urge Congress to pass the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act (S. 1738/H.R. 3530). In addition, they call on local governments and the criminal justice system to stop and deter sex buyers through arrest and prosecution, fines, fees, and penalty assessments that match the severity of the crime. They also call for additional research evaluating the effectiveness of demand reduction programs. Finally, they encourage the creation of educational programs that teach students about the dangers of the commercial sex industry.

With a hundreds of thousands of vulnerable people at risk of becoming victims of sex trafficking each year in the United States, including 300,000 children, there is an urgency to promote demand reduction. Global Centurion lauds the U.S. Conference of Mayors for its important resolution and looks forward to seeing new and innovative ways that cities incorporate the suggestions from the resolution into local government.

To view the full resolution, please visit: http://usmayors.org/82ndAnnualMeeting/media/resolutions-final.pdf#page=37

2014 Trafficking in Persons Report – Statement by Laura J. Lederer

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“Once again the State Departmenta��s annual Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report has shed light on the tragedy of modern day slavery. Around the world many men, women, and children are being subjected to inhumane treatment, exploited as commercial sex objects and forced to work as slaves. The TIP Report provides valuable information, and is an important diplomatic tool for assessing government action.

“One important addition to the TIP Report in the last couple of years is the increasing attention paid to the demand side of human trafficking. Human trafficking has a triangular business model:A� supply, demand, and distribution, and each part of this triangle of activity must be addressed if we are to make progress. Global Centurion examines the demand side of human trafficking, whether labor trafficking, sex trafficking or organ trafficking. After a careful review of this yeara��s Trafficking in Persons Report, Global Centurion found that less than 40% of countries around the world are doing anything to stop the demand for forced labor and sex slavery. Of those countries who are addressing demand, efforts often fall far short of what is needed to make a real difference in the lives of the people hurt most. Prosecuting a few sex buyers without getting any convictions is not enough. Cursory and sporadic education on the harms of sex trafficking is not enough. Governments around the world must institute and enforce laws with strong penalties for end users, while protecting those women and children trapped in the sex trade. Education must be prioritized, both for convicted users and for buyers of all kinds, for they fuel the market for human trafficking.

“The TIP Report also provides examples of progress. Several countries are making real advances that the world rest of the world can emulate.

  • The Dominican Republic and several other countries now maintain specialized police units to investigate and prosecute child sex tourism cases.
  • Countries as diverse as France and Georgia are distributing educational information to potential sex buyers on the harms of human trafficking in an effort to reduce demand.
  • In the United States a growing number of states are passing legislation that specifically targets the demand for human trafficking with deterrence for potential users and comprehensive care for victims.

“The TIP Report will continue to be a valuable measuring tool that provides an incentive for nations seeking international respect and aid to change their policies on human trafficking. But there is work to be done. To eradicate human trafficking we must redouble our efforts to target and reduce demand.”

-Laura J. Lederer
President & Founder, Global Centurion Foundation

Read the 2014 TIP Report here.


EXECUTIVE ORDER: Enforcing Federal Law With Respect To Transnational Criminal Organizations And Preventing International Trafficking

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By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, it is hereby ordered as follows:

It shall be the policy of the executive branch to:

(a)A� strengthen enforcement of Federal law in order to thwart transnational criminal organizations and subsidiary organizations, including criminal gangs, cartels, racketeering organizations, and other groups engaged in illicit activities that present a threat to public safety and national security…

Read the official order here

Available on Amazon- Modern Slavery: A Documentary and Reference Guide

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Modern Slavery: A Documentary and Reference Guide

This book provides a sobering look at modern-day slavery―which includes sex trafficking, domestic servitude, and other forms of forced labor―and documents the development of the modern-day anti-slavery movement, from early survivor voices to grassroots activism, to the passage of U.S. and international anti-slavery laws.

  • Presents an accurate and comprehensive account of the size and scope of modern slavery in the United States and around the world
  • Uses primary source materials to illuminate efforts by human rights organizations, lawmakers, and slavery survivors to combat human trafficking and rescue millions of men, women, and children from lives of backbreaking labor, forced prostitution, and other forms of enslavement
  • Illustrates how early survivor voices catalyzed the new abolitionist movement―that the brave actions of a few have benefited thousands of victims of human trafficking

This valuable reference is available for purchase on Amazon.





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