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Sex trafficking isn't what you think it is | Meghan Sobel | TEDxMileHighWomen

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    When I say sex trafficking,
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    and especially
    sex trafficking in Thailand,
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    images like this might pop into your head.
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    That's understandable.
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    Research has shown that when we don't
    have first-hand experience with an issue,
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    we craft our understandings
    based on media representations.
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    But this is the Hollywood version;
    the reality is often very different.
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    By definition, trafficking
    means forced work.
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    A victim of sex trafficking is someone
    who is forced to work in the sex industry
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    against his or her will.
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    Sex trafficking happens
    in every country on earth
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    in both urban and rural areas.
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    In fact, some people
    are mislead by the word 'traffic'
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    to think that it must involve
    cross-border movement,
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    but that's smuggling.
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    A person could be trafficked
    in their home town.
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    It's also worth noting
    that boys can be trafficked too,
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    in much the same way that girls can,
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    but oftentimes, they're left out
    of the conversation.
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    This is Oi and his younger brother.
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    They grew up in a rural hill-tribe village
    in Northern Thailand,
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    not far from the Myanmar border.
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    These hill-tribe communities
    are ethnic minorities in Thailand,
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    and highly discriminated against.
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    Oi's mother died of a heroin overdose,
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    and he and his younger siblings
    were left in the care of their stepfather.
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    It's culturally common
    in this part of the world and many others
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    for children to bear the financial
    obligation of caring for their families.
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    Being the oldest child,
    Oi felt immense responsibility.
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    There's also a great deal of migration
    in this part of the world,
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    particularly people coming from Myanmar
    to Thailand seeking a better life.
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    However, just because a baby
    is born in Thailand,
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    that baby is not guaranteed
    Thai citizenship.
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    Oftentimes, it's dependent
    upon the citizenship of their parents.
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    Oi was born in Thailand,
    but his parents are from Myanmar.
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    Thus, Oi, as well as many
    other children and adults,
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    lack citizenship in any country,
    a term that is called 'stateless.'
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    Without citizenship in Thailand,
    you can't go to public school,
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    you can't access healthcare,
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    and you can't move freely
    outside of your province.
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    As a result, Oi's options
    for earning money were very limited.
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    When he was 12 years old,
    he followed an older boy from his village
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    to the Northern Thailand city
    of Chiang Mai seeking work.
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    Oi grew up speaking a language
    unique to his village.
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    He didn't know much Thai or English,
    so when he got to Chiang Mai,
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    he started by trying to sell flowers
    to tourists in a night market,
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    but he wasn't making much money.
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    So he followed
    one of the other boys to a bar
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    in hopes of making more money there.
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    Just after nightfall, the bar,
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    situated in the heart
    of Chiang Mai's red light district,
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    filled with young boys just like Oi.
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    It did not take him long
    to see what this job entailed.
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    Oi eventually, extremely reluctantly,
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    followed in the footsteps
    of the other boys.
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    It started with drink orders and massages,
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    but in order to make enough money
    to care for his younger siblings,
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    it quickly turned into
    Oi having sex with foreign men.
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    He dreaded every evening that he worked.
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    He started drinking
    and taking drugs to numb himself,
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    but he knew that he would never
    be able to make enough money
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    working in a restaurant
    or selling souvenirs, so he continued on.
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    He felt as if he had no choice.
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    He still wasn't making enough money,
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    so during this time, Oi made the decision
    to steal $80 from one of his customers.
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    He was arrested and received
    a lengthy jail sentence,
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    likely as a result of discrimination
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    against members
    of these hill-tribe communities.
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    For stealing that $80,
    Oi spent four years in jail,
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    and his customer walked completely free.
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    Oi is a victim of sex trafficking,
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    and his story represents
    the sober realities of this life.
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    To be clear, though,
    not all sex work is trafficking.
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    There are consenting prostitutes,
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    and they deserve
    to have their rights respected.
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    Some people willingly choose
    to work in the sex industry,
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    but many do not,
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    and that's where trafficking comes in.
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    While every instance
    of sex trafficking is different,
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    Oi's story is much more
    common in Thailand,
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    among both men and women,
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    than are instances of people
    being kidnapped and chained to beds.
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    Most victims of sex trafficking
    are physically free,
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    but not psychologically free.
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    On one hand, Oi is not chained to a bed.
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    In theory, he can walk away
    from the situation at any time.
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    However, if he does that, his family
    will not be able to afford to eat.
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    His younger siblings will have to work,
    maybe in the sex industry,
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    and because of the financial obligation,
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    he'll likely bring immense shame
    to himself and his family.
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    Is that really a choice that he can make?
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    He has no choice.
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    I'm fortunate to have been born
    into a middle class family
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    and raised in a nice suburb
    outside of Boulder.
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    I have a great deal of privilege,
    and thus, vast choices.
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    When I started researching
    sex trafficking in 2008,
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    I thought it meant that girls
    were kidnapped and chained to beds.
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    But since then,
    my understanding of the issue
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    and how best to stop it has evolved,
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    and I want to take you
    on that journey with me.
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    Many western NGOs, staffed
    with well-intentioned folks like myself,
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    have started working on anti-trafficking
    efforts around the world.
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    Specifically in Thailand,
    some of these Western organizations
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    have begun conducting
    what are called 'smart raids.'
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    They identify a facility, a bar,
    a brothel, a massage parlor,
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    and they raid the facility.
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    They remove the people
    that they believe were trafficked,
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    and oftentimes they remove
    all of the sex workers in that facility.
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    They then take them to a shelter.
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    While this might sound
    like a noble effort,
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    it's ineffective in addressing
    the broader social, political,
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    and economic web of issues
    that create such problems.
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    At times, it even exacerbates the problem.
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    It subjects these individuals
    to possible deportation
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    and long, involuntary stays in shelters.
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    Many report feeling
    like they are in prison.
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    And, because it ignores
    the economic causes
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    that resulted in this person working
    in the sex industry in the first place,
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    it can mean that a younger sibling
    has to enter the sex industry
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    to support the family.
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    Additionally, the social system in place
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    does not provide appropriate
    aftercare or rehabilitation,
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    so many people end up back in the brothel
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    with increased trauma
    and increased distrust of NGOs.
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    But, you can see where these
    well-meaning Westerners got the idea.
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    Smart raids make sense
    for rescuing girls chained to beds.
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    They don't make sense
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    for addressing complex cycles
    of intergenerational poverty.
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    They are merely a reactionary approach
    to a false notion of the problem:
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    the Hollywood version.
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    They are called 'smart raids,'
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    but I think they should really be called
    'not-smart-at-all raids.'
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    So, what can we do?
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    We can start by acknowledging the fact
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    that trafficking is the result of complex
    social, political, and economic problems.
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    But just because
    there's a lot of grey area,
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    it doesn't mean there aren't
    concrete steps we can take to stop it.
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    First, as Westerners,
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    it's about time that we confront
    the issue of demand.
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    As long as there is a demand,
    there will be a supply.
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    We want the purchasers of this sex
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    to look like greasy,
    creepy, back-alley men
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    that live in faraway places.
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    But they're not.
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    Many are clean-cut,
    well-dressed, successful Americans.
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    They are our sons,
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    and brothers,
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    and neighbors,
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    and co-workers.
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    Given the surreptitious nature
    of sex trafficking,
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    we don't know the specific statistics
    about how prevalent Americans are
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    in purchasing this sex,
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    but by many estimates
    and my own observations,
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    Americans account
    for the majority of sex purchased
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    from trafficked individuals in Thailand.
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    What are we doing in our society today
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    to raise people to think
    that it's okay to go to Thailand,
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    or go down the block in their hometown,
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    and pay to have sex with a child?
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    We have the choice to address
    this issue of demand head-on
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    by having difficult conversations
    with our loved ones
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    about what our privileged actions
    are doing to those that have few choices.
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    Additionally, we can leverage
    our privilege in other ways.
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    We can advocate for policy changes
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    that address the root causes
    of inequality, locally and globally:
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    labor laws, immigration laws,
    gender inequality,
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    access to education and healthcare.
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    We can funnel resources into programs
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    that promote aftercare and rehabilitation
    for trafficking survivors.
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    This is a recent picture of Oi.
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    He was released from jail
    earlier this year,
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    and with the help of a Chiang Mai-based
    anti-trafficking organization
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    called Urban Light,
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    he received health services,
    transitional housing, legal services,
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    and language and employment skills.
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    He now works full time helping other boys
    get the resources that they need
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    to have the choice to leave the bar.
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    We can succeed in transforming
    the lives of sex trafficking victims
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    at home and abroad,
    but we must first deal with the reality.
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    While things like citizenship
    and statelessness and language skills
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    don't make for as exciting
    of a documentary as a raid does,
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    they have a lasting impact
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    on breaking the cycle of poverty
    that causes trafficking.
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    Ultimately, if we want
    to end sex trafficking,
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    we need to rethink
    how we understand what it is.
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    Let's cut through the Hollywood hype
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    and leave these
    not-smart-at-all raids behind.
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    Let's expand our understanding of choice
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    and move beyond raising awareness
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    to truly tackle the core issues
    surrounding trafficking.
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    I will leave you with the words
    of Dr. Wayne Dyer:
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    "If you change the way you look at things,
    the things you look at change."
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    (Applause)
Title:
Sex trafficking isn't what you think it is | Meghan Sobel | TEDxMileHighWomen
Description:

“When I first started studying sex trafficking in 2008, I thought it meant girls were kidnapped and chained to beds,” explains Professor Meghan Sobel. Soon she realized that was the Hollywood version - not the reality. In order to combat sex trafficking effectively, we must first understand what it is.

Meghan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at Regis University, where she teaches classes on international communication, public relations, and human rights. Meghan's research focuses on the role of mass media in combating human rights abuses and humanitarian crises. She is also a certified cake decorator.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
13:40

English subtitles

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