|
|
|
Destination side, demand and prevention - General discussions and studies on demand |
| |
O'Connell Davidson, J. (2001). The Sex Exploiter. Theme paper for the Second World Congress Against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children. December 2001. Yokohama. 18 p. This paper considers the diversity of “sex exploiters” and draws attention to the social, political and economic factors that shape demand for the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children, going beyond the limited preoccupation with “paedophilia”. http://www.csecworldcongress.org/PDF/en/Stockholm/Background_reading/Theme_papers/Theme paper Sex Exploiter 1996_EN.pdf |
Click
here to download the document (Filesize:
299.91 kb) 
|
 |
Shared Hope International. (2007). Demand: A Comparative Examination of Sex Tourism and Trafficking in Jamaica, Japan, the Netherlands, and the United States. 172 p. SHI investigated the commercial sex markets in Jamaica, Japan, the Netherlands and the United States - Atlanta, Las Vegas and Washington, DC. The report and documentary reveal for the first time, the sophisticated business model behind sex trafficking and tourism, exposing the buyers who bring demand, the traffickers and recruiters who supply the victims, and the facilitators that feed the market. "DEMAND shows that the only way to impede the commercial sex markets and the sexual exploitation of women and children is to tackle demand and stop buyers from buying."
http://www.sharedhope.org/files/DEMAND.pdf |
Click
here to download the document (Filesize:
13596.31 kb) 
|
 |
Terre des hommes (Tdh). Foundation. (2005). Summary of Findings: A Study of Trafficked Nepalese Girls and Women in Mumbai and Kolkata, India. 59 p. This is a qualitative study of Nepalese girls and women after they have been sold for prostitution into brothels in Mumbai and Kolkata, India—a study of their first days, their years of confinement and their years in sex work after their release. The study investigates the economic forces that drive trafficking from Nepal: the demand of the client, and more important, the demand of the brothel owner. The study uses two strong, globally important and imprecise terms to designate the two alternative situations in which trafficked Nepalese girls and women spend their first two to ten years in the brothel: slavery and debt bondage. http://www.childtrafficking.com |
Click
here to download the document (Filesize:
1985.24 kb) 
|
 |
International Labour Organization (ILO). (2006). The Demand Side of Human Trafficking in Asia: Empirical Findings. 120 p. This regional demand-side study covered five countries in Asia and a number of sectors in each country: commercial sex work was looked into in all five countries; domestic labour was included in all countries but Pakistan; organized begging was included in all but Nepal; firework production was researched in Sri Lanka; and children used in armed conflict were investigated in Nepal and Sri Lanka. http://www.childtrafficking.com |
Click
here to download the document (Filesize:
2689.06 kb) 
|
 |
United Nations Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking. (UN.GIFT). (2008). Demand for Forced Labour and Sexual Exploitation - How and Why it fuels Human Trafficking 12 p. This background paper provides background information on the issues of the ILO’s primary concern, with a particular focus on trafficking for forced labour exploitation, and raises questions for further discussion. http://www.childtrafficking.com |
Click
here to download the document (Filesize:
141.53 kb) 
|
 |
| Pages : [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] | |
|
|