Trafficking in Human Beings and Smuggling of Migrants in ACP Countries :

Subtitle
Key Challenges and Ways Forward, Informing discussions of the ACP-EU Dialogue on Migration and Development
Volume, number, page
119 p.
Year of Publication
2018
Author(s)
MANN Lori J.
Organization Name
International Organization for Migration
Acronym
IOM
Publisher
IOM
City
Brussels
Country of Publication
Belgium
Considered Countries
Dominican Republic
Papua New Guinea
Haití
Angola
Senegal
Samoa
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Trinidad and Tobago
Guinea
Category
Official Documents
Theme
Subregion - European Union
Country - European Union
BIREGIONAL RELATIONS UE - LAC
Agreements
Summits
BIREGIONAL DIALOGUES UE-LAC
Government
Academic
Business
Civil Society
Keyword(s)
Migration
Migration policy
ACP-EU relationship
International migration
Migration and Development
Human Trafficking
Trafficking in human beings
Irregular migration flows
Immigration
Restrictive migration policies
Smuggling
Human Rights
Undocumented immigration
International labour migration
Immigration law
Refugees
Immigration/immigrants
Abstract
Trafficking in human beings (THB) and smuggling of migrants (SoM), two distinct but often interrelated phenomena, occur on a global scale. Searching for a way out of economic inequalities, environmental crises, armed conflict, political instability and persecution, and in view of tightening border controls and restricted options for legal migration, migrants are driven to seek the services of smugglers. At the same time, a globalized economy fosters demand for diverse types of exploitation, which also makes migrants vulnerable to traffickers. Both THB and SoM are billion-dollar businesses that exact high human costs. This is illustrated by the many migrants dying while being smuggled along increasingly dangerous migration routes, and by the millions of trafficking victims trapped in exploitative situations worldwide. The African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Group of States are increasingly stepping up to address THB and SoM. However, they face challenges in developing the necessary holistic, long-term interventions that combine law enforcement with a rights-based, victim-centred approach and with prevention efforts that are linked to development and offer realistic, practical alternatives to irregular migration. This ACP-EU Migration Action publication analyses these challenges and provides recommendations to tackle the difficulties that ACP countries face in relation to THB and SoM.