Human trafficking is the act of conducting illegal human beings exploitation and trade for forced labor, reproduction favors or prostitution. In today's world, human trafficking is equivalent to slavery. The international community must do what it can to recognize it as such if at all this crime is to be fully eradicated (Kempadoo, 94-95).
Research questions
How does a free society compare to a repressive society for the purpose of forced labor on human trafficking?
What societal factors contribute to the human trafficking today? How do they lead to human trafficking and how can they be prevented? (Davidson, 244).
What are the evils which are associated with human trafficking?
How is human trafficking changing or impacting the today's world?
What potential solutions can be given to the human trafficking problem and what can people do to take part in suggesting the solutions to this problem? (Lee, 72).
How does a country which is economically stable compare with a country which is economically poor on the human trafficking prevalence?
Can societies that are victims of poverty, starvation and unemployment benefit from such illegal actions such as human trafficking?
Are there any differences between the current human trafficking and the ancient human slavery? If they are the same, what role is international law enforcement playing in addressing this issue?
What should the community or the world know about the human traffic crime?
How can people be involved in the fight against human trafficking business? (Davidson, 244).
Work cited
Kempadoo, Kamala, Jyoti Sanghera, and Bandana Pattanaik. Trafficking and prostitution reconsidered: New perspectives on migration, sex work, and human rights. Routledge, 2015.
Lee, Maggy, ed. Human trafficking. Routledge, 2013.
Davidson, Julia O'Connell. "New Slavery, old binaries: human trafficking and the borders of freedom'." Global Networks 10.2 (2010): 244.