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Searching with a thematic focus on Globalisation, Gender and migration, Movement people forced labour
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Legal review on trafficking in persons in the Caribbean: the Bahamas, Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica, the Netherlands Antilles, St. Lucia and Suriname
International Organization for Migration, 2005This report provides a review of legislation and government policy related to combating human trafficking in seven Caribbean countries: the Bahamas, Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica, the Netherlands Antilles, St. Lucia and Suriname.DocumentInternational dialogue on migration no. 6: health and migration: bridging the gap
International Organization for Migration, 2005This paper is based on the Seminar on Health and Migration held in 2004 to assess the public health implications of increasingly mobile populations, and to integrate health policies into migration management strategies.The Seminar focused on the public health implications of increasingly mobile populations.DocumentThe return and reintegration of victims of trafficking from Cambodia to Thailand 01 July 2004 – 30 March 2005 and repatriation from Cambodia to Vietnam of Vietnamese victims of trafficking from 15 May 1999 – 30 March 2005
Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilitation, Cambodia, 2005This report presents information and statistics compiled from an information database held at the Anti-trafficking and Reintegration Office within the Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilitation (MoSVY) – a documentation centre for information on returns and reintegration of trafficked Cambodia women and children from Thailand.DocumentData and research on human trafficking: a global survey
International Organization for Migration, 2005This study provides a synthesis and analysis of the main types of research on trafficking in different parts of the world. The review of research and data on trafficking shows that despite the growing literature on trafficking around the world, relatively few studies are based on extensive or empirical research, and there lacks comprehensive information on the actual numbers of people traffickeDocumentThe movement of women: migration, trafficking, and prostitution in the context of Nepal’s armed conflict
Human Trafficking, 2005This study aims to understand the patterns of girls’ and women’s movement in contemporary Nepal, especially in view of the conflict which is leading to serious threats in the lives of women and girls.Main findings of the study include:conflict is significantly increasing both external migration and internal migrationthe number of women and girls migrating though borders to India inDocumentTrafficking in women for sexual exploitation and good practices for addressing the problem by all stakeholders
United Nations [UN] Division for the Advancement of Women, 2005The paper discusses initiatives to combat trafficking in women which qualify as "good practices" examples in combating trafficking in women for sexual exploitation. They include policies, programmes and legislation aimed at combating and eliminating trafficking in women for sexual exploitation, focusing on Nigerian examples.DocumentCrossing borders: an empirical study of transnational prostitution and trafficking in human beings
Institute for Applied International Studies, Norway, 2004This report looks at the recruitment into prostitution in Norway of foreign women, focusing on the processes which led to their recruitment, the role of enforcement, exploitation and trafficking, and how women found their way out again.The report argues that exploitation may take on different forms, and it is not always clear where a line can be drawn between trafficking and voluntary prostitutDocumentAn absence of choice: the sexual exploitation of North Korean women in China
Anti-Slavery International, 2005This report examines the situation of North Korean women who illegally escape to China in search of food and work.It finds that in China, the irregular status of undocumented North Korean women contributes to their vulnerability to sexual exploitation, including trafficking into forced marriage, the sex industry, as well as voluntary and quasi-voluntary arranged marriages.DocumentFor the price of a bike: child trafficking in Togo
Plan, 2005This paper documents the pervasiveness of child trafficking in Togo: the extent, causes, forms and consequences of the phenomenon; the urgent need for further action at various levels; and the work being undertaken by organisations, to tackle the problem.The study finds that children trafficking victims are mainly drawn from the impoverished rural population where both illiteracy amongst adultsDocumentTrafficking in persons report 2005
US Department of State, 2005This report describes the scope and nature of global trafficking and assesses governments’ efforts to combat trafficking, including labour slavery, internal labour trafficking, forced labour and involuntary servitude.Foreign governments’ efforts to enforce laws against trafficking, protect victims, and prevent trafficking are rated in tiers: each narrative explains the basis for rating a countrPages
