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The Center’s work to combat trafficking of women and girls into the United States is a crucial part of its advocacy for women’s human rights.  As a major destination country for traffickers, the United States federal government and all 50 states must craft domestic responses to this global human rights crisis.

Each year thousands of women and girls are trafficked into the United States, where they are held in involuntary servitude for forced labor and sexual exploitation.

In many ways, the Center’s work on trafficking is the 21st stage of our founders’ early policy leadership in the 1970s – which defined violence against women and girls as a public policy issue at a time when it was considered a personal problem in the private sphere and not relevant to the public sphere. 

To a great extent, the Center’s success depends on our national network of state legislators who participate in the Contract with Women of the USA® State Legislators Initiative. In fact, graduates of the Center’s Foreign Policy Institute for State Legislators have sponsored most of the anti-trafficking legislation that states have enacted.

US PACT Clearinghouse

The US PACT Clearinghouse includes:

       
featured publication

The featured publication is the Center's 2007 Report Card on State Action to Combat International Trafficking. This is the first ever state-by-state analysis of state legislatures' efforts to confront trafficking of women and girls into the US.

Read the press release.

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Resources

GlobalPOWER®
(Partnership Of Women Elected Representatives)

The Center for Women Policy Studies convened the second annual GlobalPOWER® program in 2007 with a focus on international trafficking of women and girls as a human rights crisis.

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Spotlight

Each year, 600,000 - 800,000 people are trafficked across international borders, 80% of which are women and children.

Between 15,000 and 100,000 women and girls are trafficked into the United States each year for forced labor -- in brothels and other forms of sexual exploitation, in sweatshops, households, agricultural fields and other workplaces.

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