Tag Archives: Human Rights

How Online Communication Platforms Facilitated Human Trafficking and Rethinking the Websites as Hosts theory

By Aamy Kuldip (view PDF version)

I. Introduction

Human trafficking is a horrific crime that involves stealing one’s freedom for profit.[1]Victims of human trafficking may be tricked or forced into providing commercial sex or illegal labor, and are often left extremely traumatized.[2] Online communication platforms, such as Facebook, Twitter, and Craigslist, enable human trafficking efforts by providing easy access to personal information that can be used by traffickers to profile and recruit potential victims.[3]The internet further facilitates human trafficking on a global scale increasing the scope of advertising, recruitment, coordination, or control.[4]The potential global scope of internet-facilitated human trafficking greatly complicates criminal and civil investigations and makes the coordination of law enforcement efforts extremely challenging due to evidentiary issues.[5] In its annual Federal Human Trafficking Report, the Human Trafficking Institute found that eighty-three percent of active 2020 trafficking cases involved online solicitation.[6] Specifically, fifty-nine percent of victims in active sex trafficking cases and sixty-five percent of underage victims recruited online in 2020 active sex trafficking cases occurred on Facebook.[7] As an example, a seventeen-year-old girl ran away from her home in North Carolina to be with a thirty-two-year-old man whom she met on Facebook.[8]After chatting over Facebook Messenger, he convinced the victim to meet him in person.[9] Afterwards, he took the victim to a hotel, where she was trafficked and transported to Florida along with three other victims.[10]

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#OUREXPERIENCESMATTER: HOW RACE, GENDER AND SOCIO-ECONOMIC IDENTITY HAVE HISTORICALLY INFLUENCED THE CRIMINALIZATION OF THE BLACK FEMALE SEX WORKER — A LOOK AT EARLY-TWENTIETH CENTURY NEW YORK AND PRESENT-DAY SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO

By Kyra Sampson, ’23 (PDF Version)

I. Introduction

The Black female body has remained a subject of American political discourse for centuries. Beginning during the proliferation of slavery in the Western Hemisphere in the seventeenth century to present day, the conversation about the ways in which a Black woman presents herself and how her body is utilized — regardless of whether it is for public or private consumption — is one that is incessant. Just look at Lizzo. Although the pop artist has received much critical acclaim since the 2017 release of her third studio album, Cuz I Love You, arguably, media coverage has focused less on her music over the years and more on her physical stature and appearance. A self-described “big girl,” much of the conversation around Lizzo’s body has been centered around ideas that she is often too “scantily-clad” for someone her size or that she is unconsciously promoting a variety of serious health conditions like heart disease, diabetes, and cancer as an ‘obese’ musical artist with an expansive social and cultural platform.[1] Having been privy to the many debates surrounding her body, Lizzo has admittedly expressed having long felt excluded and, arguably, policed by the public because of “her Blackness, her size, and her sexuality.”[2]

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Electronic Monitoring: A Means to the Continuation of the Commodification of American Bodies that Exists under the Current American Criminal Justice System

Electronic Monitoring: A Means to the Continuation of the Commodification of American Bodies that Exists under the Current American Criminal Justice System

Written by: Reginald Streater, ’18

Electronic Monitoring (EM) may enable those who would have otherwise been incarcerated to have higher levels of treatment or services for problems such as substance abuse, low education levels, and unemployment for the convicted, but policy discussions for or against the expansion of EM should be grounded in the context of what the criminal justice system has become today—a tool that some have taken advantage of to feed the prison industrial complex with predominately black and brown bodies…
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The Importance of Free Speech: “Unite the Right” Rally

The Importance of Free Speech: “Unite the Right” Rally

Written By: Tausha Saunders, ’19

By now, you have all heard about the “Unite the Right” Rally that occurred on Charlottesville, VA on August 12, 2017. But perhaps you haven’t heard that the ACLU of Virginia filed a preliminary injunction on behalf of the organizer of the Rally, Jason Kessler.  Continue reading

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