Policy Brief: Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks : Evidence from IOM’s Victims of Human Trafficking Database

This policy brief presents the main findings of the report “Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks. The report focuses on risk factors that are expected to increase the vulnerability to human trafficking from and within origin countries such as economic shocks, measured by large, discrete chang...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Policy Brief
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099720003292224485/P174494-c37c2fcf-f23c-496b-b8cb-eaa23c97e956
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37257
id okr-10986-37257
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-372572022-04-04T18:38:42Z Policy Brief: Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks : Evidence from IOM’s Victims of Human Trafficking Database World Bank SEX WORKERS EXPLOITATION HUMAN TRAFFICKING HUMAN SLAVERY FISHING INDUSTRY LOCAL LABOR MARKETS HIGH-RISK JOBS ECONOMIC INSTABILITY This policy brief presents the main findings of the report “Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks. The report focuses on risk factors that are expected to increase the vulnerability to human trafficking from and within origin countries such as economic shocks, measured by large, discrete changes to export commodity prices and to GDP. It also explores the role that institutions play through enforcing the rule of law, providing access to justice, and implementing anti-trafficking policies, as protective factors that could weaken the link between economic shocks and an increase in human trafficking. The analysis verifies that economic shocks are significant risk factors that increase vulnerability to human trafficking. In origin countries, economic vulnerabilities, especially those caused by global commodity price shocks, are strongly positively correlated with observed cases of trafficking. For instance, the economic shock produced by a typical decrease in export commodity prices is associated with an increase in the number of detected victims of trafficking of around 12 percent. The analysis suggests that good governance institutions and particularly a commitment to the rule of law and access to justice as well as stricter anti-trafficking policies and social assistance can have a limiting effect on the number of observed cases of trafficking following economic shocks. 2022-04-01T21:04:48Z 2022-04-01T21:04:48Z 2022-04 Policy Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099720003292224485/P174494-c37c2fcf-f23c-496b-b8cb-eaa23c97e956 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37257 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC Policy Brief
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic SEX WORKERS
EXPLOITATION
HUMAN TRAFFICKING
HUMAN SLAVERY
FISHING INDUSTRY
LOCAL LABOR MARKETS
HIGH-RISK JOBS
ECONOMIC INSTABILITY
spellingShingle SEX WORKERS
EXPLOITATION
HUMAN TRAFFICKING
HUMAN SLAVERY
FISHING INDUSTRY
LOCAL LABOR MARKETS
HIGH-RISK JOBS
ECONOMIC INSTABILITY
World Bank
Policy Brief: Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks : Evidence from IOM’s Victims of Human Trafficking Database
description This policy brief presents the main findings of the report “Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks. The report focuses on risk factors that are expected to increase the vulnerability to human trafficking from and within origin countries such as economic shocks, measured by large, discrete changes to export commodity prices and to GDP. It also explores the role that institutions play through enforcing the rule of law, providing access to justice, and implementing anti-trafficking policies, as protective factors that could weaken the link between economic shocks and an increase in human trafficking. The analysis verifies that economic shocks are significant risk factors that increase vulnerability to human trafficking. In origin countries, economic vulnerabilities, especially those caused by global commodity price shocks, are strongly positively correlated with observed cases of trafficking. For instance, the economic shock produced by a typical decrease in export commodity prices is associated with an increase in the number of detected victims of trafficking of around 12 percent. The analysis suggests that good governance institutions and particularly a commitment to the rule of law and access to justice as well as stricter anti-trafficking policies and social assistance can have a limiting effect on the number of observed cases of trafficking following economic shocks.
format Policy Brief
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Policy Brief: Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks : Evidence from IOM’s Victims of Human Trafficking Database
title_short Policy Brief: Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks : Evidence from IOM’s Victims of Human Trafficking Database
title_full Policy Brief: Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks : Evidence from IOM’s Victims of Human Trafficking Database
title_fullStr Policy Brief: Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks : Evidence from IOM’s Victims of Human Trafficking Database
title_full_unstemmed Policy Brief: Economic Shocks and Human Trafficking Risks : Evidence from IOM’s Victims of Human Trafficking Database
title_sort policy brief: economic shocks and human trafficking risks : evidence from iom’s victims of human trafficking database
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099720003292224485/P174494-c37c2fcf-f23c-496b-b8cb-eaa23c97e956
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37257
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