Movements especially brought forward by and held by feminists during the early to mid-twentieth have aimed to protect women and young children from the harmful effects of trafficking. Perhaps the most recognizable results such efforts is the creation of the International Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Women and Children introduce in 1921. The main aspect of the convention was that it “requests countries to take necessary measures to prosecute persons who are engaged in the traffic in children of both sexes” (A Short History of Trafficking in Persons). When taking in count the seriousness of human trafficking hundred years ago and comparing it to the current situation of human trafficking in the international level, there might little to no difference. International human trafficking was a serious issue post slavery in the twentieth century and currently there is evidence that the issue has in fact worsened. In the twentieth century, the scope of international Human Trafficking has impact regions such as Asia-Pacific “where most of the world’s forced laborers come from at 56%, an estimated 11.7 million people, followed by Africa at 18% or 3.7 million people live in bondage” (Hagopian). If the issue of human trafficking proved to be bad in the past, it has become more evident that it grown into an international business as it is claimed that when “considering that at the peak of America’s slavery, the [recorded amount of slaves] was four million … five times that number are currently suffering in slavery here in the twenty-first century” (Hagopian). Yet it is obvious that determining exact amount of women and children currently affect is incredibly difficult as it is a crime/business that is on the international
Movements especially brought forward by and held by feminists during the early to mid-twentieth have aimed to protect women and young children from the harmful effects of trafficking. Perhaps the most recognizable results such efforts is the creation of the International Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Women and Children introduce in 1921. The main aspect of the convention was that it “requests countries to take necessary measures to prosecute persons who are engaged in the traffic in children of both sexes” (A Short History of Trafficking in Persons). When taking in count the seriousness of human trafficking hundred years ago and comparing it to the current situation of human trafficking in the international level, there might little to no difference. International human trafficking was a serious issue post slavery in the twentieth century and currently there is evidence that the issue has in fact worsened. In the twentieth century, the scope of international Human Trafficking has impact regions such as Asia-Pacific “where most of the world’s forced laborers come from at 56%, an estimated 11.7 million people, followed by Africa at 18% or 3.7 million people live in bondage” (Hagopian). If the issue of human trafficking proved to be bad in the past, it has become more evident that it grown into an international business as it is claimed that when “considering that at the peak of America’s slavery, the [recorded amount of slaves] was four million … five times that number are currently suffering in slavery here in the twenty-first century” (Hagopian). Yet it is obvious that determining exact amount of women and children currently affect is incredibly difficult as it is a crime/business that is on the international