35 min listen
15 – Homelessness and Human Trafficking: How They Connect
15 – Homelessness and Human Trafficking: How They Connect
ratings:
Length:
34 minutes
Released:
Nov 10, 2011
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Sandra Morgan and Dave Stachowiak discuss how homelessness is a factor that can lead a person to become a victim of trafficking. They take a look at the statistics of youth who are homeless and how it relates to human trafficking discussing what we can do to help.
Key Points
1.3 million runaway homeless youth live in America.
57% of homeless kids spend at least one day every month without food.
25% of foster kids become homeless within two years of leaving the system.
4 distinct homeless youth populations: Runaway minors, expelled youth, system youth, and street youth.
It's about survival, when someone offers youth an opportunity to make money or offers them a place to sleep, the kids will do what they can to survive.
55% of street girls engage in some form of commercial sexual exploitation.
1 in 5 become entangled in some sort of organized crime network.
Resources
Solidarity Sleepout
EP. 6 - Maria's Human Trafficking Story
Ensure Justice Conference
Covenant House
[Note from the Ending Human Trafficking podcast team: This episode was recorded in 2011 so the contact information provided is no longer accurate. Please refer endinghumantrafficking.org/contact for the correct contact information to get in touch with the EHT podcast.]
Love the show? Consider supporting us on Patreon!
Become a Patron
Transcript
Dave: You’re listening to the Ending Human Trafficking Podcast; this is episode number 15, recorded in October 2011. Welcome to the Ending Human Trafficking Podcast, my name is Dave Stachowiak.
Sandie: And my name is Sandie Morgan.
Dave: And this is the show where we empower you to study the issues, be a voice and make a difference in ending human trafficking. Sandie, we are back today to talk about another lens to look through prevention of human trafficking with, and that is the lens of homelessness, and homelessness is unfortunately a major factor and a contributing factor in many cases, the start of the human trafficking chain that we’ve talked about many times before.
Sandie: Homelessness is a contributing factor; it’s a precursor, it's part of the pool of easily assessable victims that traffickers have to draw from.
Dave: SO before we jump in and talk about homelessness and how homelessness becomes a factor in human trafficking, Sandie, a couple of things for our audience to know up front is were talking about this topic today, you inevitably will have some questions for us, and we have a number of questions from our audience here today that we’ll address in our show today from your past feedback, but if you have questions for us, you should hop onto email and send us an email to GCWJ@vanguard.edu and that goes directly to Sandie’s office at the Global Center for Women and Justice here at Vanguard University, and of course you are able to call in with a question too, and Sandie, folk can reach us by phone at?
Sandie: (714) 556-3610 ext. 2242. Leave us a voicemail and we will get back to you.
Dave: There are also a couple of things coming up that the Center is involved with, Sandie, that we should let folks know about, one of them is, there is a web-x online now about community engagement. Could you share just a little bit more about that?
Sandie: We were asked to do national web-x training for the best practices for community engagement by the Health and Human Services anti-human trafficking office in Washington. That web-x is now available online, you can go and listen and watch the PowerPoint and get some tips.
Dave: And that’s on our website at GCWJ.vanguard.edu. You can find the Global Center for Women and Justice page there, the other thing you will find is information on the upcoming solidarity sleep-out, and that’s actually coming up here in Southern California on November 18th,
Key Points
1.3 million runaway homeless youth live in America.
57% of homeless kids spend at least one day every month without food.
25% of foster kids become homeless within two years of leaving the system.
4 distinct homeless youth populations: Runaway minors, expelled youth, system youth, and street youth.
It's about survival, when someone offers youth an opportunity to make money or offers them a place to sleep, the kids will do what they can to survive.
55% of street girls engage in some form of commercial sexual exploitation.
1 in 5 become entangled in some sort of organized crime network.
Resources
Solidarity Sleepout
EP. 6 - Maria's Human Trafficking Story
Ensure Justice Conference
Covenant House
[Note from the Ending Human Trafficking podcast team: This episode was recorded in 2011 so the contact information provided is no longer accurate. Please refer endinghumantrafficking.org/contact for the correct contact information to get in touch with the EHT podcast.]
Love the show? Consider supporting us on Patreon!
Become a Patron
Transcript
Dave: You’re listening to the Ending Human Trafficking Podcast; this is episode number 15, recorded in October 2011. Welcome to the Ending Human Trafficking Podcast, my name is Dave Stachowiak.
Sandie: And my name is Sandie Morgan.
Dave: And this is the show where we empower you to study the issues, be a voice and make a difference in ending human trafficking. Sandie, we are back today to talk about another lens to look through prevention of human trafficking with, and that is the lens of homelessness, and homelessness is unfortunately a major factor and a contributing factor in many cases, the start of the human trafficking chain that we’ve talked about many times before.
Sandie: Homelessness is a contributing factor; it’s a precursor, it's part of the pool of easily assessable victims that traffickers have to draw from.
Dave: SO before we jump in and talk about homelessness and how homelessness becomes a factor in human trafficking, Sandie, a couple of things for our audience to know up front is were talking about this topic today, you inevitably will have some questions for us, and we have a number of questions from our audience here today that we’ll address in our show today from your past feedback, but if you have questions for us, you should hop onto email and send us an email to GCWJ@vanguard.edu and that goes directly to Sandie’s office at the Global Center for Women and Justice here at Vanguard University, and of course you are able to call in with a question too, and Sandie, folk can reach us by phone at?
Sandie: (714) 556-3610 ext. 2242. Leave us a voicemail and we will get back to you.
Dave: There are also a couple of things coming up that the Center is involved with, Sandie, that we should let folks know about, one of them is, there is a web-x online now about community engagement. Could you share just a little bit more about that?
Sandie: We were asked to do national web-x training for the best practices for community engagement by the Health and Human Services anti-human trafficking office in Washington. That web-x is now available online, you can go and listen and watch the PowerPoint and get some tips.
Dave: And that’s on our website at GCWJ.vanguard.edu. You can find the Global Center for Women and Justice page there, the other thing you will find is information on the upcoming solidarity sleep-out, and that’s actually coming up here in Southern California on November 18th,
Released:
Nov 10, 2011
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
19 – Runaway Girl: Survivors provide an important perspective on how we can work to end human trafficking. Sandie and Dave are joined by Carissa Phelps and Mariana Smirnova to discuss survivor empowerment and state and national legislation to address human trafficking. by Ending Human Trafficking Podcast