A comparative study of the U.S.-Canadian role in combating human trafficking

Human trafficking is a modem day form of slavery that exists in most parts of the world today including North America. In response to this problem, Canada needs to become more actively involved in combating this modem day form of indentured servitude. Canadian law reform efforts to date have been in...

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Main Author: Mohajerin, Shadan
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17783
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-177832018-01-05T17:39:06Z A comparative study of the U.S.-Canadian role in combating human trafficking Mohajerin, Shadan Human trafficking is a modem day form of slavery that exists in most parts of the world today including North America. In response to this problem, Canada needs to become more actively involved in combating this modem day form of indentured servitude. Canadian law reform efforts to date have been insufficient and have inadvertently contributed to the problem by (1) re-victimizing women and children, (2) failing to assist prosecutions and investigations (3) helping traffickers circumvent domestic laws, (4) failing to deal with the root causes of trafficking, (5) failing to protect victims, (6) not creating national programs for support and rehabilitation, and (7) not making public awareness of trafficking a priority for law enforcement officials and the public. To more effectively combat this problem a different kind of law reform agenda is necessary which adopts a multidisciplinary approach that makes victims and victim protection a central priority in the nation’s anti-trafficking strategy. Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies Graduate 2010-01-08T17:00:40Z 2010-01-08T17:00:40Z 2006 2006-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17783 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Human trafficking is a modem day form of slavery that exists in most parts of the world today including North America. In response to this problem, Canada needs to become more actively involved in combating this modem day form of indentured servitude. Canadian law reform efforts to date have been insufficient and have inadvertently contributed to the problem by (1) re-victimizing women and children, (2) failing to assist prosecutions and investigations (3) helping traffickers circumvent domestic laws, (4) failing to deal with the root causes of trafficking, (5) failing to protect victims, (6) not creating national programs for support and rehabilitation, and (7) not making public awareness of trafficking a priority for law enforcement officials and the public. To more effectively combat this problem a different kind of law reform agenda is necessary which adopts a multidisciplinary approach that makes victims and victim protection a central priority in the nation’s anti-trafficking strategy. === Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies === Graduate
author Mohajerin, Shadan
spellingShingle Mohajerin, Shadan
A comparative study of the U.S.-Canadian role in combating human trafficking
author_facet Mohajerin, Shadan
author_sort Mohajerin, Shadan
title A comparative study of the U.S.-Canadian role in combating human trafficking
title_short A comparative study of the U.S.-Canadian role in combating human trafficking
title_full A comparative study of the U.S.-Canadian role in combating human trafficking
title_fullStr A comparative study of the U.S.-Canadian role in combating human trafficking
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of the U.S.-Canadian role in combating human trafficking
title_sort comparative study of the u.s.-canadian role in combating human trafficking
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17783
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