Feminists
Related: About this forum20.9 million victims of Forced Labour. Women and girls represent the greater share of forced labour
Today sees the launch of a new ILO global estimate of forced labour a shocking 20.9 million women, men and children are trapped in jobs into which they were coerced or deceived and which they cannot leave. Our estimate captures the full realm of forced labour and human trafficking for labour and sexual exploitation, or what some call modern-day slavery. The figure means that, at any given point in time, around three out of every 1,000 persons worldwide are suffering in forced labour.
News item | 01 June 2012
Some highlights of the results:
18.7 million (90%) people are in forced labour in the private economy, exploited by individuals or enterprises. Out of these, 4.5 million (22%) are in forced sexual exploitation, and 14.2 million (68%) in forced labour exploitation in activities such as agriculture, construction, domestic work and manufacturing.
Women and girls represent the greater share of forced labour victims 11.4 million (55%), as compared to 9.5 million (45%) men and boys.
Adults are more affected than children 74% (15.4 million) of victims fall in the age group of 18 years and above, whereas children are 26% of the total (or 5.5 million child victims).
2.2 million (10%) work in state-imposed forms of forced labour, for example in prisons under conditions which violate ILO standards, or in work imposed by the state military or by rebel armed forces.
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http://www.ilo.org/sapfl/News/WCMS_182109/lang--en/index.htm
Technical report
Executive summary
Q&A
Global factsheet

libodem
(19,288 posts)For posting this.
Catherina
(35,568 posts)When I was brushing up on this for some work we're doing down here, the numbers we found were much higher. I'm in no position to dispute their numbers but I'm not so sure about the methodology they used for this.
The Philippines was estimated to have between 300,000 and a million women in prostitution in http://www.uri.edu/artsci/wms/hughes/mhvbt.htm
This was in 2010 for just Latin America
One month after the massacre of 72 undocumented migrants in the North East of Mexico, experts and activists at the second Latin American Conference on Smuggling and Trafficking of Human Beings have criticised the lack of attention and action given to the issue by governments. The conference host, David Fernández Dávalos, described human trafficking as a modern, particularly malignant and better disguised version of slavery. According to the Mexican Ministry of Public Security, 250.000 people throughout Latin America become victims of human trafficking every year, but numbers vary.
The Coalition Against Trafficking of Women And Girls in Latin America and the Caribbean estimate that five million women and girls are currently trapped in trafficking networks, with further 10 million in danger of falling victim to them. Even though most Latin American countries have established laws against trafficking, criminal prosecution of perpetrators remains a problem due to both the initial invisibility of the issue and the links to other organised crime such as drug trafficking.
http://www.asylumaid.org.uk/data/files/publications/143/WAN_October.pdf
MerryBlooms
(11,929 posts)Catherina
(35,568 posts)I can't process this morally.
MerryBlooms
(11,929 posts)the body's self-preservation kicking in.

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