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Trafficking (general studies, country reports) - Europe - Western Europe |
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Stichting Defence for Children International. (2005). Investigation Exploitation. Research into trafficking in children in the Netherlands. 112 p. There are increasing concerns about trafficking in children, both in the Netherlands and globally. Traffickers bring foreign children to the Netherlands, often under false pretences, and force them to work in the sex industry. Dutch girls and boys also fall victim to such practices. The exploitation suffered by children can take many different forms, in addition to prostitution. Children are forced to do domestic chores, work in the catering industry, or are drawn into drugs trafficking and other criminal activities.
http://polis.osce.org/library/f/2716/549/NGO-NLD-RPT-2716-EN-Investigating%20Exploitation.pdf |
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Tahir, Z. (2005). Traffic of Punjabi Children to Europe. The Case of France. 18 p. Current research takes the situation of separated children in France as a case study to extrapolate the results at European level since it is observed that separated children arrive in France via many other EU countries and many of them from France go to other EU countries. Thus, being a destination as well as transit, the French case may provide a clear idea of the whole picture. http://www.childtrafficking.com |
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338.25 kb) 
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Terre des hommes (Germany). (2001). Handel mit Kindern in die Bundesrepublik Deutschland. 54 p. This report, Trafficking of Children to Germany, is the result of investigation regarding the trafficking of children to Germany. Report in GERMAN. http://www.childtrafficking.com/ |
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196.85 kb) 
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The Anti Trafficking Monitoring Group. (2012). All Change: Preventing Trafficking in UK. 2012. 96 p. "The Anti-Trafficking Monitoring Group’s (ATMG) research found that some preventative activities have been implemented across the UK and identified some areas of good practice, in particular at regional and local levels. Good examples were, however, somewhat obscured by the overall lack of a comprehensive prevention strategy. Consequently, prevention seems to be the weakest of the “three P’s” - prevention - protection – prosecution - used to frame anti-trafficking work. There appears to be three main reasons for this: a limited understanding of the concept of prevention in the context of trafficking in human beings, the absence of a coherent prevention strategy, and the fragmented coordination of anti-trafficking efforts overall." http://www.antislavery.org/includes/documents/cm_docs/2012/a/atmg_all_change_prevention.pdf |
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7343.76 kb) 
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The Protection Project (2008). Austria. 6 p. “Austria is a transit and destination country for trafficking in women and children. Countries of origin include Central and Eastern European countries such as Belarus, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Lithuania, Romania, and Slovakia, as well as other countries such as the Dominican Republic and possibly China.” http://www.protectionproject.org/human_rights_reports/report_documents/austria.doc |
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55.5 kb) 
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