Human Trafficking

1635 Words4 Pages

Slavery is a form of human bondage, in which people were forced to follow the demands of whoever owns them. Although it was abolished in the 19th century, slavery has been resurrected and has taken the form of human trafficking, a form of modern-day slavery, in which thousands of foreign people are smuggled across national borders as forced labor in factories, farms, and brothels. The way human traffickers persuade foreign women into coming to their country is forcing them against their will or falsely promising them the American dream. The threats that human trafficking present are that it deprives people of their human rights, it is a global health risk, and fuels the growth of organized crimes, like sex crimes. The United States has tried their best to abolish human trafficking with harsher prison penalties, more power to police and prosecutors, and more emergency shelters for victims, however it still is a huge problem in certain parts of the United States. Through the research that has been conducted in this particular crime, one can understand how human traffickers smuggle foreigners across national borders, what they put their victims through, and the stories victims live to tell about how they escaped. Human trafficking has many deep dark secrets that most people in the United States have not taken the initiative to analyze the situation.

Many victims of human trafficking pay traffickers to smuggle them across the United States border with the hopes of having a better life, but are then forced to work for them, fearing deportation or violence if they try to escape. Annually, a little over sixteen-thousand victims are trafficked into the United States. (Schwartz) Some of these women could not report to the authorities bec...

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... what effects their actions will have. In closing, if anybody knows anyone who is being trafficked, report to the authorities, as soon as possible. Everybody deserves the chance to live the American dream any way they want to.

Work Cited

“Facts About Human Trafficking,” U.S. Department of State Bureau of Public Affairs, www.state.gov, October 25, 2008.

Bergman, Barry. “Human Trafficking Steps from the Shadows,” www.berkeley.edu/news, October 25, 2008.

Fox, Aubrey. “A Modern Slavery,” www.gothamgazette.com, October 25, 2008.

Kahng, Grace. “One Young Woman Shares the Story of How She Escaped from Forced Labor,” www.msnbc.msn.com, October 22, 2008.

Miranda, Nannette. “Human Trafficking More Common in California,” www.abclocal.go.com, October 25, 2008

Schwartz, Matthew. “Human Trafficking,” www.abcactionnews.com, October 25, 2008

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