Facts about Human Trafficking

10 Important facts about Human Trafficking you should know

    1. Human trafficking is a global issue, affecting millions of people around the world.
    1. It involves the exploitation of individuals for labor or sexual purposes through force, fraud, or coercion.
    1. The majority of human trafficking victims are women and children, particularly those from marginalized communities.
    1. The illegal trade of human beings generates billions of dollars in profit for traffickers and their networks.
    1. Human trafficking often involves complex networks of organized crime and corruption.
    1. Victims of human trafficking are often forced to work in industries such as agriculture, manufacturing, and domestic work.
    1. The global pandemic has exacerbated the risk of human trafficking, with many people facing economic hardship and increased vulnerability to exploitation.
    1. Anti-human trafficking efforts often focus on preventing trafficking, protecting victims, and prosecuting traffickers.
    1. International organizations and NGOs play a key role in addressing human trafficking, working to raise awareness and advocate for stronger laws and policies.
    1. Combating human trafficking requires a multi-faceted approach that involves survivors, governments, civil society, and international/national organizations working together.

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Human Trafficking: Myth vs Reality

Myth

Human trafficking is always or usually a violent crime.

Reality

The most pervasive myth about human trafficking is that it often involves kidnapping or physically forcing someone into a situation. In reality, most traffickers use psychological means such as, tricking, defrauding, manipulating or threatening victims into providing commercial sex or exploitative labor.

Myth

All human trafficking involves sex.

Reality

Human trafficking is the use of force, fraud or coercion to get another person to provide labor or commercial sex. Worldwide, experts believe there are more situations of labor trafficking than of sex trafficking, but there is much wider awareness of sex trafficking in the U.S. than of labor trafficking.

Myth

Traffickers target victims they don’t know.

Reality

Many survivors have been trafficked by romantic partners, including spouses, and by family members, including parents.

Myth

Only undocumented foreign nationals get trafficked in the United States.

Reality

Polaris has worked on thousands of cases of trafficking involving foreign national survivors who are legally living and/or working in the United States. These include survivors of both sex and labor trafficking.

Myth

Only women and girls can be victims and survivors of sex trafficking.

Reality

Men and boys are also victimized by sex traffickers. LGBTQ boys and young men are seen as particularly vulnerable to trafficking.

Myth

Human trafficking only happens in illegal or underground industries.

Reality

Human trafficking cases have been reported and prosecuted in industries including restaurants, cleaning services, construction, factories and more. 

Myth

Human trafficking involves moving, traveling or transporting a person across state or national borders.

Reality

Human trafficking is often confused with human smuggling, which involves illegal border crossings. In fact, the crime of human trafficking does not require any movement whatsoever. Survivors can be recruited and trafficked in their own home towns, even their own homes.

Myth

If the trafficked person consented to be in their initial situation, then it cannot be human trafficking or against their will because they “knew better.”

Reality

Initial consent to commercial sex or a labor setting prior to acts of force, fraud, or coercion (or if the victim is a minor in a sex trafficking situation) is not relevant to the crime, nor is payment.

Myth

People being trafficked are physically unable to leave their situations/locked in/held against their will.

Reality

That is sometimes the case. More often, however, people in trafficking situations stay for reasons that are more complicated. Some lack the basic necessities to physically get out – such as transportation or a safe place to live. Some are afraid for their safety. Some have been so effectively manipulated that they do not identify at that point as being under the control of another person.

Myth

Labor trafficking is only or primarily a problem in developing countries.

Reality

Labor trafficking occurs in the United States and in other developed countries but is reported at lower rates than sex trafficking.

Myth

All commercial sex is human trafficking.

Reality

All commercial sex involving a minor is legally considered human trafficking. Commercial sex involving an adult is human trafficking if the person providing commercial sex is doing so against his or her will as a result of force, fraud or coercion.

Myth

People in active trafficking situations always want help getting out.

Reality

Every trafficking situation is unique and self-identification as a trafficking victim or survivor happens along a continuum. Fear, isolation, guilt, shame, misplaced loyalty and expert manipulation are among the many factors that may keep a person from seeking help or identifying as a victim even if they are, in fact, being actively trafficked.