Showing posts with label MODERN-DAY SLAVERY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MODERN-DAY SLAVERY. Show all posts

Sunday, April 26, 2015

WORKER EXPLOITATION CONFERENCE ADDRESSES FORCED LABOR

FROM:   U.S. LABOR DEPARTMENT
Worker Exploitation Conference Seeks Solutions

Dialogues on federal, state and local strategies to prevent and mitigate forced labor and exploitative labor practices were convened by the Labor Department, the International Labour Organization, Humanity United and the Burkle Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. The first of two conferences was held in Washington, D.C., on April 22. It featured conversations with Laura Fortman, deputy administrator of the Wage and Hour Division; and Mark Mittelhauser, Eric Biel and Marcia Eugenio of the Bureau of International Labor Affairs. Discussions examined strategies for prevention, protection and remedy, as well as existing and potential partnerships to address forced labor and labor exploitation. The ILO estimates that nearly 21 million people are trapped in forced labor or conditions akin to modern-day slavery, which generates $150 billion in illegal profits annually.

Friday, November 23, 2012

HUMAN TRAFFICKING IN CALIFORNIA


FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Cracking Down on Traffickers

With California stakeholders convening Nov. 16 to discuss a sobering new report about the problem of human trafficking in the state, Secretary Solis appeared with state Attorney General Kamala Harris to discuss the administration's commitment to fight what President Obama has called "modern-day" slavery. In a keynote address at the University of Southern California, Solis outlined department-led efforts to train wage and hour investigators to spot warning signs of trafficking and help survivors recover lost wages and find employment to get back on their feet. She also reviewed efforts by the Bureau of International Labor Affairs to combat forced labor and the trafficking of children around the world. She noted that the department is part of a multi-agency anti-trafficking coordination team in Los Angeles and shared stories of efforts to partner with law enforcement to put traffickers behind bars. "We have to change the perverse calculus of gangs and smugglers who believe the rewards of trafficking outweigh the criminal risks," Solis said. "Only by working together can we bring these criminals to justice. Only by working together can we give their innocent victims the courage to escape and start over."

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