President Obama has declared January National Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention Month, saying “this month we rededicate ourselves to stopping on of the greatest human rights abuses of our time.” So there’s no better place to start than by continuing to provide funding to groups that provide support to victims of human trafficking in the United States–right?
The Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA), which was first proposed and passed with bipartisan support in 2000, defined human trafficking as a person “induced to perform labor or a commercial sex act through force, fraud, or coercion” and deemed any person under 18 a victim of human trafficking, regardless of whether force, fraud, or coercion was present. It defined the victims of trafficking as victims, not criminals. The Act provided non-profit groups like FAIR Girls with the funding to support victims of sex trafficking and protected 20 million. But after re-authorization in 2003, 2005, and 2008, TVPA was allowed to expire in 2011. GovTrack.us shows the bill’s status as “Died.”
The United States has been a global leader in the fight on human trafficking. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been a longtime champion for the cause, citing “more than a dozen years” of work on this issue at the presentation of the 2012 Trafficking In Persons Report in June, and in a September address at the Clinton Global Initiative Annual Meeting President Obama lent his support to stopping this “debasement of our common humanity.” So why does it seem instead to have stopped legislatively?
Andrea Powell, a co-founder of FAIR Girls, explained the lack of re-authorization of TVPA this time around to The Cycle hosts as a product of election year politics, pushbacks on spending, and lack of awareness. “Everyone loses if this isn’t reauthorized,” she said. “No one, whether it’s an American child or a man from Bangladesh, deserves to be enslaved.”








