29 min listen
160 – The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime: An Interview with Panagiotis Papadimitriou
160 – The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime: An Interview with Panagiotis Papadimitriou
ratings:
Length:
31 minutes
Released:
Jan 1, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Dr. Sandra Morgan and Dave Stachowiak talk to Panagiotis Papadimitriou to discuss the important work he is doing at UNODC. They discuss the legal database and research he is conducting. They also talk about the difference between human trafficking and migrant smuggling and why it is so critical to understand the distinction.
Key Points
Much of UNODC’s work revolves around developing studies and conducting research.
UNODC’s target audience is people involved in the criminal justice processes.
UNODC maintains a database that allows practitioners to search for past cases to use as a reference.
Many people, including government officials, confuse and conflate human trafficking with migrant smuggling.
Human trafficking revolves around the key concept of exploitation.
Human smuggling involves moving from one person to another location illegally, but this often leads to human trafficking.
Trafficking victims often have more protections than illegal migrants.
Resources
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
Global Report on Trafficking in Persons
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If you enjoyed this episode, please take a moment to subscribe or rate the podcast on iTunes by clicking here. Click here for FAQs about podcasts and how to subscribe.
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Contact us with questions, comments, or suggestions at feedback@endinghumantrafficking.org.
Transcript
Dave: [00:00:00] You're listening to the Ending Human Trafficking podcast. This is episode number 160, The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
Production Credits: [00:00:08] Produced by Innovate Learning, maximizing human potential.
Dave: [00:00:30] Welcome to the Ending Human Trafficking podcast. My name is Dave Stachowiak.
Sandie: [00:00:35] And my name is Sandie Morgan.
Dave: [00:00:38] 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, one of the great benefits that I've gotten just on a purely selfish level over the years of being a cohost on the show with you is learning so many things about the world, organizations that you've partnered with Sandie, and so much about this issue. And one of the institutions that I've learned a little bit about in that time is the United Nations. And I'm really excited today to be able to learn more about a part of the United Nations I'm very unaware of and I think our audience will learn a lot too. And today's guest comes from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, and his name is Panagiotis Papadimitriou. Panagiotis is a Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice officer working in the human trafficking and migrant smuggling section of the Organized Crime Branch of the division of treaty affairs under the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime headquarters. He joined Sandie in Athens, Greece for the conference on human trafficking during the Greece summer study abroad. And Sandie, that was this past summer wasn't it.
Sandie: [00:01:51] That's right. And we've been invited back. So welcome to the show. We'll dispense with formalities and we're just going to call you Takis because you've become a great friend and we have learned so much from you since meeting you in Greece this last summer.
Panagiotis: [00:02:09] Thank you very much, Sandie. I have to say I'm very glad to be here with you and talk to you. And actually, it was a great pleasure for me to join you in Athens. And I have to tell you that I have learned an equal lot if not more than you did through my participation there.
Sandie: [00:02:29] You are very kind. First of all, though, let's tell our listeners about what the UNODC actually is and why combating human trafficking is situated in that office in Vienna.
Panagiotis: [00:02:44] Well you know this is first of all the department of the Secretariat of the United Nations and is actually the department that is man...
Key Points
Much of UNODC’s work revolves around developing studies and conducting research.
UNODC’s target audience is people involved in the criminal justice processes.
UNODC maintains a database that allows practitioners to search for past cases to use as a reference.
Many people, including government officials, confuse and conflate human trafficking with migrant smuggling.
Human trafficking revolves around the key concept of exploitation.
Human smuggling involves moving from one person to another location illegally, but this often leads to human trafficking.
Trafficking victims often have more protections than illegal migrants.
Resources
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
Global Report on Trafficking in Persons
Are you enjoying the show?
If you enjoyed this episode, please take a moment to subscribe or rate the podcast on iTunes by clicking here. Click here for FAQs about podcasts and how to subscribe.
Haven't been receiving our newsletter? Visit our homepage to join today.
Contact us with questions, comments, or suggestions at feedback@endinghumantrafficking.org.
Transcript
Dave: [00:00:00] You're listening to the Ending Human Trafficking podcast. This is episode number 160, The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
Production Credits: [00:00:08] Produced by Innovate Learning, maximizing human potential.
Dave: [00:00:30] Welcome to the Ending Human Trafficking podcast. My name is Dave Stachowiak.
Sandie: [00:00:35] And my name is Sandie Morgan.
Dave: [00:00:38] 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, one of the great benefits that I've gotten just on a purely selfish level over the years of being a cohost on the show with you is learning so many things about the world, organizations that you've partnered with Sandie, and so much about this issue. And one of the institutions that I've learned a little bit about in that time is the United Nations. And I'm really excited today to be able to learn more about a part of the United Nations I'm very unaware of and I think our audience will learn a lot too. And today's guest comes from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, and his name is Panagiotis Papadimitriou. Panagiotis is a Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice officer working in the human trafficking and migrant smuggling section of the Organized Crime Branch of the division of treaty affairs under the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime headquarters. He joined Sandie in Athens, Greece for the conference on human trafficking during the Greece summer study abroad. And Sandie, that was this past summer wasn't it.
Sandie: [00:01:51] That's right. And we've been invited back. So welcome to the show. We'll dispense with formalities and we're just going to call you Takis because you've become a great friend and we have learned so much from you since meeting you in Greece this last summer.
Panagiotis: [00:02:09] Thank you very much, Sandie. I have to say I'm very glad to be here with you and talk to you. And actually, it was a great pleasure for me to join you in Athens. And I have to tell you that I have learned an equal lot if not more than you did through my participation there.
Sandie: [00:02:29] You are very kind. First of all, though, let's tell our listeners about what the UNODC actually is and why combating human trafficking is situated in that office in Vienna.
Panagiotis: [00:02:44] Well you know this is first of all the department of the Secretariat of the United Nations and is actually the department that is man...
Released:
Jan 1, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
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