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Toolkit for Business on Reducing Child and Forced Labor July 31st, 2013
“Reducing Child Labor and Forced Labor: A Toolkit for Responsible Businesses” is guidance from the US Department of Labor designed for companies to help them make sure they are not using forced or child labor in their operations or their supply chain. It is very clear and comprehensive.
We all know someone who owns or has a responsible position in a business – spread the word! Access the toolkit here….
The International Labor Organization (ILO) estimates that there are 215 million children in child labor worldwide, 115 million of them in hazardous forms of work. It also estimates that 21 million people are in forced labor, six million of them children.
By utilizing this toolkit, companies show that they are concerned about these grim statistics. Using the tool-kit reduces the chance that their products — and the raw materials they come from — are manufactured, mined or harvested by children who should be in school, or by workers locked in sweatshops or forced into work through false promises or threats.
In order to effectively combat the risks of child labor and forced labor in a company’s operations and global supply chains, it is essential to have a comprehensive and transparent social compliance system in place. The goal of this toolkit is to assist companies that may not have such a system, as well as companies whose existing systems may need strengthening — particularly in the areas of child labor and forced labor.
“Slavery in Supply Chains: The Role Businesses and Consumers Can Play in Ending Human Trafficking” August 13th, 2012
Experts from the Alliance to End Slavery and Trafficking (ATEST) in a webcast, addressed the role businesses here in the U.S. and abroad can play to ensure their supply chains are free from slavery. To view the webcast and live chat, please click here.
This webcast is the second in a series of webcasts on the realities of modern-day slavery. To view ATEST’s first webcast on victims of modern-day slavery please click here.
Have something to add? Join the discussion on human trafficking on ATEST’s Facebook page.
January Proclaimed Human Trafficking Month January 12th, 2010
President Obama has proclaimed January 2010 as National Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention Month, culminating in the annual celebration of National Freedom Day on February 1.
The US State Department estimates that 14,500-17,500 people are trafficked into the United States each year in a modern-day version of slavery. These numbers do not show the estimated 100,000 minors that are trafficked within U.S. borders into prostitution, nor do they show the individuals that never receive services or law enforcement intervention.
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