Human Trafficking In South Asia Essay

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Millions of women and child have been trafficked across borders and within countries in recent years, making human-trafficking a global industry that generates an estimated five to seven billion U.S. dollars each year. It is estimated that 300,000 to 450,000 people are trafficked within Asia each year, of which more than half take place in South Asia. Women and children, particularly girls, are trafficked within country boundaries and to other countries beyond South Asia. The growing of human-trafficking problem in South Asia has been recognized and has become a serious concern over the last decades. The reason it has become a main concern is because of the health issues such trafficking is causing is the rise of HIV/ AIDS and other STD,STIs …show more content…

The neo-regulators on the other hand want to legalize prostitution because they want to work and believe anyone who is in such job does it at free well, but they also believe that is such legalization occurs human-trafficking would actually decrease and everyone wins. The definition of human trafficking is “acts involving forced labor, force marriages, and forced prostitution (United Nations 2000:2)” now this definition isn’t always used but they used it because most actions done to control and break down human trafficking in south Asia is very much linked to prostitution and it makes it very limited when activist are trying to fight for rights. Historically speaking in 1949 there was a convention which is criticized because it did nothing to help human rights and specifically women/ children but “marginalized” them, it wasn’t until 1970 that the Global North Feminist group made a comeback to the movement because of the “sex tourism in south Asia, stationing of large numbers of US military personnel in bases in the region, and women crossing borders for prostitution and/ or working in the entertainment industry.” It was then that child and women trafficking

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