The San Francisco Chronicle’s Series on Sex Trafficking

Part one
Part two
Part three

Part four
How the paper reported the series

And…finding help:

Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, Global Fund for Women, The Protection Project, Human Rights Watch Campaign Against the Trafficking of Women and Girls, Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women, Free the Slaves – a nonprofit based in Washington, D.C., working to end slavery worldwide, U.N. Global Programme Against Trafficking in Human Beings, U.S. Department of Justice Human Trafficking Hot Line; (888) 428-7581, U.S. Department of Justice, Office for Victims of Crime, Trafficking in Persons, Freedom Network Institute on Human Trafficking, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Campaign to Rescue and Restore Victims of Human Trafficking, trafficking referral hot line; (888) 373-7888

California:

Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking (CAST), a Los Angeles nonprofit providing legal, social and advocacy services to human-trafficking victims. CAST opened the nation’s first shelter for trafficking victims in fall 2004, (213) 365-1906 The Standing Against Global Exploitation Project (SAGE), a San Francisco nonprofit working to end criminal sexual exploitation of children and adults, (415) 905-5050, Asian Pacific Islander Legal Outreach, a San Francisco-based legal and social assistance center that helped form the Asian Anti-Trafficking Collaborative, which brings social workers, police, prosecutors and immigration officials together to combat human trafficking, (415) 567-6255, Asian Women’s Shelter, San Francisco (415) 751-7110, Cameron House, San Francisco, (415) 781-0401, The Jewish Coalition to End Human Trafficking; (415) 346-4600.

Reports:

U.S. State Department Annual Report on Trafficking in Persons, Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000.

See also: Sinister Girl.

Share
This entry was posted in Acts of Violence, Feminism and Law, Feminism and Politics, Sisters In Other Nations. Bookmark the permalink.