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Trafficking (general studies, country reports) - Asia - Eastern Asia |
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International Labour Organisation (ILO). Japan Office. (2005). Human Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation in Japan. 89 p."Japan is recognized as a destination country for the trafficking of women mainly from Southeast Asia, Latin America, and increasingly from Eastern Europe. The majority of women trafficked to Japan appear to be adult women, although there is some evidence that some are under 18 years of age, probably travelling on forged passports." http://www.ilo.org/dyn/declaris/DECLARATIONWEB.DOWNLOAD_BLOB?Var_DocumentID=4556 |
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720.43 kb) 
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International Labour Organisation/International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (ILO/IPEC), (2002). Yunnan Province China, Situation of Trafficking in Women and Children: a Rapid Assessment. Bangkok: ILO. 62 p. "Since the 1980s, trafficking in women and children has grown in China at an alarming rate. Today it threatens the social stability and development of many rural communities as well as causing enormous distress to many individuals and families. In Yunnan, the eighth-largest province in China and one of the areas worst affected by trafficking, on average over 1,000 children and women are trafficked annually." http://www.ilo.org/public/english/region/asro/bangkok/child/trafficking/downloads/final-yunnan-ra-2003.pdf |
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358.22 kb) 
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International Organization for Migration (IOM). (2002). A Review of Data on Trafficking in the Republic of Korea. 86 p. The scale and organisation of trafficking is presented, after a discussion on both migration and the sex industry in the South Korean context in order to show how circumstances render trafficking to be more closely associated with the sex industry than with other migration issues. http://www.iom.int//DOCUMENTS/PUBLICATION/EN/mrs_9_2002.pdf |
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498.87 kb) 
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National Human Rights Commission of Mongolia (NHRCM). (2002). The Crime of Trafficking of Women and Children in Mongolia: The Current Situation. "Mongolia has become a transit place for the trafficking of women from China and Russia. The practice of trafficking women out of Mongolia into other countries has also appeared." http://www.tipinasia.info/files/doc/8/1/18/Trafficking%20report%20by%20HRCommission+CHRD.doc |
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125.92 kb) 
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O'Connell Davidson, J. (2001). Children in the Sex Trade in China. 37 p. "This report highlights the link between children's presence in China's commercial sex trade and the inequalities that exist between urban and rural dwellers, between provinces, between city residents and migrants, between ethnic minority groups, and between men and women." http://www1.rb.se/Shop/Archive/Documents/2707 Children in the sex trade in China.pdf |
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311.21 kb) 
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