2011 TIP Report Release
The U.S. State Department’s Annual Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report was released on Monday, June 27, 2011. It is compiled each year to analyze 184 governments’ efforts to combat human trafficking within their own borders. Governments are ranked into one of three tiers based on their attempts to meet the “minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking” in Section 108 of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA). It is useful as a tool for diplomatic pressure and incentives, a map of trafficking streams and trends, and an update on status quo practices and implementation of anti-trafficking efforts globally. [Read more →]

June 28, 2011 1 Comment
Report card on ourselves

My last blog was about the 9th annual global Trafficking in Persons Report rolled out this week by the Secretary of State. One of the most important aspects of the rollout is not the Report. It’s the concurrent Report on the fight against human trafficking within the United States compiled by the Attorney-General. [Read more →]

June 18, 2009 1 Comment
A state-of-the-art global report

This week Secretary of State Clinton and my successor as anti-trafficking ambassador, former anti-slavery prosecutor Luis CdeBaca, rolled out the annual Trafficking in Persons Report. The rollout embodied the bipartisan and inter-branch support of the anti-slavery issue which I experienced as ambassador. This report is an invaluable tool to nudge and prod other governments to improve their records fighting slavery. Whether they had a welcoming or grousing response, governments focused on their anti-trafficking efforts after reading the report. At the UN world conference on human trafficking in Vienna in February 2008, I heard dozens consider it rightly the state-of-the-art global report, like no other. [Read more →]

June 17, 2009 1 Comment
Human rights journalists sentenced to labor camps

When I heard about the detention of two American journalists, Laura Ling and Euna Lee, by North Korean authorities in March, my first thought focused on their courage and the importance of their mission to document the little-reported stories of North Korean refugees in China. The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea had recently released a comprehensive report on North Korean refugees victimized by human traffickers. Grassroots organizations such as Liberty in North Korea (LiNK) have also worked to raise awareness through video presentations. [Read more →]

June 12, 2009 No Comments
Where diplomatic immunity becomes impunity

In a few days, a group of non-government organizations will be meeting with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about a serious human trafficking matter: the veritable enslavement of some domestic servants by diplomats. On our soil. [Read more →]

May 18, 2009 4 Comments
