In today’s society human trafficking is considered a modern form of slavery. It’s becoming a wide spread problem all around America. Human Trafficking involves making a profit by controlling a woman or man into forced labor, sexual exploitation, or both. By trapping these victim’s traffickers use violence, threats, debt bondage, deception, and any other horrific manipulative tactics to trap their victims. Traffickers will promise their victims a high-paying job, loving relationship, and or new exciting opportunities. On the other hand they may kidnap these victims and use physical violence to control them. Often both traffickers and victims share the same national, ethnic or cultural background. This allows the trafficker to have a better understanding of the …show more content…
The human trafficking industry is globally estimated to affect 2.4 million people.” The Director of the United Nations Office on Drug and Crime had asked the community for protective law enforcement on human trafficking. To make this law more enforceable a debate was turned to experts and asked the question “Is law enforcement alone enough to reduce human trafficking?” Sara Elizabeth Dill is a founding partner in the Chicago and Miami offices of the Law offices. She started off by saying “law enforcement has been the greatest impediment to combating human trafficking” by decreasing human trafficking many problems must be looked at, such as looking at criminal justice, immigration, economics, politics, and eliminating demand. By eliminating the profits and the risks, human trafficking would no longer exist. When economics come into play many women are left into no other option but to “voluntarily” join prostitution. In other cases women that are forced into labor tend to complain because of the economic situation that their