Human Trafficking: A Hidden Crisis in Advanced Countries.

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Human trafficking is not just a problem in developing countries, but also a phenomenon in advanced countries such as The United States which happens to be one of the top three destinations for trafficked victims. A large factor that contributes to the high level of human trafficking is big airports. It provides easy access in and out of cities and countries without attracting unusual attention. According to figure three about human trafficking in the United States, eighty-three percent of trafficked victims are American born citizens and one in seven victims receive an online solicitation. Many of the victims in the United States are actually from what are considered to be “good” families, rather than runaways, just coerced by the traffickers …show more content…

However, there are some potential benefits that are related to this modern-day criminality. Usually in large cities, some human trafficking is voluntary; an individual can sign up to be smuggled into a different country, which allows people to move from overpopulated areas into other areas that will have more resources and accommodations to sustain them. They may find a decent job, become financially stable, and turn into the head provider of their household. Another benefit of trafficking is by providing cheap labor to factories, such as assembly line workers, or to service industries, such as maids, resulting in the reduced cost of production which lowers the prices for consumers worldwide. By producing goods at a lower cost, similar companies will be forced to innovate and improve their industrial practices to stay competitive. It encourages the development of better products and more effective …show more content…

Victims usually arrive to their destination by shipping containers to be out of sight; a method that is very easy and profitable for the traffickers. Most authorities are not suitably trained to identify these types of crimes, therefore, the perpetrators are able to transport the victims without being suspected of any illegal trade of humans. Transportation alone can cause short-term health effects on the victims inside the shipping containers; there is a limited supply of oxygen, food or water, and rest to sustain them. Often times, people who arrive at the destinations are malnourished and dehydrated which result in poor health and a lowered survival rate in this illegal industry which is roughly around seven years after entering the industry. Ultimately, this can lead to the victim being thrown away or murdered because they are not useful in contributing to the forced labored services or making a profit in prostitution. The government is creating laws to make shipping human cargo, or forced immigration, illegal by using tamper proof seals or by having security cameras in the loading docks to pick up any suspicious activities with the vessels. Shipping containers, while a great solution for the quick shipment of merchandises, have led and supported multitudinous crimes being committed including human

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