Human Sex Trafficking
Human Sex Trafficking
Human Sex Trafficking
Prohibition – Bans
prostitution as a
whole (current UN
approach)
Legalization –
Prostitution is legal
but subject to
legislation (Current
approach in
Germany and the
Netherlands)
Germany’s Prostitution Laws
• In 2002, Germany legalized both
prostitution and brothels
• Prostitutes get legal status and social
benefits
• Compensation for payments cannot be
transferred
• Close regulation through licensing,
registration and health checks
• Should the US move away from prohibition
and adopt a legalization strategy closer to
Germany’s?
TIPs Report
• The US Department of State began
monitoring human trafficking in 1994 with
the Department’s Annual Country Reports
on Human Rights Practices.
• The US now publishes an annual
Trafficking in Persons (TIPs) report
detailing the status of trafficking around
the world, and what governments are
doing to reduce this human rights abuse.
**One country does not appear on the
report… The US!
2007 TIP Report
• Tier 1: AUSTRALIA, AUSTRIA, BELGIUM, CANADA, COLOMBIA, CZECH
REPUBLIC, DENMARK, FINLAND, FRANCE, GEORGIA, GERMANY, HONG
KONG, HUNGARY, ITALY, KOREA, REP. OF LITHUANIA, LUXEMBOURG,
MALAWI, MOROCCO, NETHERLANDS, NEW ZEALAND, NORWAY, POLAND,
SLOVENIA, SPAIN, SWEDEN, SWITZERLAND, UNITED KINGDOM
• Tier 2: AFGHANISTAN, ALBANIA, ANGOLA, AZERBAIJAN, BANGLADESH,
BELIZE, BENIN, BOLIVIA, BOSNIA/HERZEGOVINA, BRAZIL, BULGARIA,
BURKINA FASO, CAMEROON, CHILE, CONGO (DRC), COSTA RICA, COTE
D'IVOIRE, CROATIA, EAST TIMORE, CUADOR, EL SALVADOR, ESTONIA,
ETHIOPIA, GABON, GHANA, GREECE, GUINEA, GUINEA-BISSAU, INDONESIA,
ISRAEL, JAMAICA, JAPAN, JORDAN, KYRGYZ REPUBLIC, LAOS, LATVIA,
LEBANON, LIBERIA, MACEDONIA, MADAGASCAR, MALI, MALTA, MAURITIUS,
MONGOLIA, MONTENEGRO, NEPAL, NICARAGUA, NIGER, NIGERIA,
PAKISTAN, PANAMA, PARAGUAY, PERU, PHILIPPINES, PORTUGAL, ROMANIA,
RWANDA, SENEGAL, SERBIA, SIERRA LEONE, SINGAPORE, SLOVAK
REPUBLIC, SURINAME, TAIWAN, TAJIKISTAN, TANZANIA, THAILAND, TOGO,
TURKEY, UGANDA, URUGUAY, VIETNAM, YEMEN, ZAMBIA, ZIMBABWE
• Tier 2 Watch List: ARGENTINA, ARMENIA, BELARUS, BURUNDI,
CAMBODIA, CENTRAL AFRICAN REP., CHAD, CHINA (PRC), CYPRUS,
DJIBOUTI, DOMINICAN REP., EGYPT, FIJI, THE GAMBIA, GUATEMALA,
GUYANA, HONDURAS, INDIA, KAZAKHSTAN, KENYA, LIBYA, MACAU,
MAURITANIA, MEXICO, MOLDOVA, MOZAMBIQUE, PAPUA NEW GUINEA,
RUSSIA, SOUTH AFRICA, SRI LANKA, UKRAINE, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
• Tier 3: ALGERIA, BAHRAIN, BURMA, CUBA, EQUATORIAL GUINEA, IRAN,
KUWAIT, MALAYSIA, NORTH KOREA, OMAN, QATAR, SAUDI ARABIA, SUDAN,
SYRIA, UZBEKISTAN, VENEZUELA
What do the tiers in the
TIPs Report mean?
• Tier 1: Countries that fully comply with the act’s
minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking.
• Tier 2: Countries that do not fully comply with the
minimum standards but are making significant efforts
to bring themselves into compliance.
• Tier 2 Watch List: These countries require special
scrutiny because of a high or significantly increasing
number of victims; failure to provide evidence of
increasing efforts to combat trafficking; or an
assessment as Tier 2 based on commitments to take
action over the next year.
• Tier 3: Countries that neither satisfy the minimum
standards nor demonstrate a significant effort to come
into compliance. Countries in this tier are subject to
potential non-humanitarian and non-trade sanctions.
What is the U.S. asking the
world to do?
• There is a critical need for increased
rescues of trafficking victims and
prosecutions of traffickers.
• People freed from slavery must be treated
as victims of crime, not criminals.
• The demand for modern-day slaves
must be stopped. This is not a victimless
or harmless crime, and the public should
be informed of the risks involved with it.
U.S. Funding Worldwide