¶ … Human Trafficking: Causes and Motivating Forces
There's no doubt that human trafficking is one of the saddest evils of our day: "On the worldwide black market, the third most profitable commodity after illegal weapons and drugs is human flesh: women and girls from all over Eastern Europe, sold for sex by the networks of organized crime that became entrenched in the aftermath after the fall of communism" (Malarek, 2011). Other scholars call it "modern day slavery" or "a slippery and confounding evil" (Skinner, 2008). Regardless of what human trafficking is most accurately referred to, the more one entrenches oneself with a bold study of the literature and research that surrounds human trafficking, the better one will understand what motivates and perpetuates this crime against humanity and the better armed one becomes at abolishing it.
For example, in the article, "Human Trafficking in the United States: Expanding Victim Protection Beyond Prosecution Witnesses" the effectiveness of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 signed into law by President Clinton is examined unflinchingly. One of the main arguments that this article makes is that this law has such tough eligibility requirements and such stringent requirements of victim cooperation with law enforcement that it makes any implied or potential benefits to the victims extremely hard to reap:
"Specifically, victims who have been raped, tortured, or otherwise brutalized, as is common in human trafficking, often suffer severe psychological trauma, which may make them incapable of discussing the traumatic events. Under the TVPA, if these traumatized individuals are not able to meet complex eligibility...
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