Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

193 – Child Institutionalization and Human Trafficking

193 – Child Institutionalization and Human Trafficking

FromEnding Human Trafficking Podcast


193 – Child Institutionalization and Human Trafficking

FromEnding Human Trafficking Podcast

ratings:
Length:
28 minutes
Released:
Mar 4, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Chad Salitan joins Dr. Sandie Morgan and Dave Stachowiak again, to further discuss the TIP Report and its special topics. Chad serves in the State Department’s Trafficking in Persons office as a Deputy Coordinator for the Reports & Political Affairs Section to lead the U.S. government’s diplomatic engagement on sex trafficking and forced labor. Chad and Sandie discuss the many challenges that need to be restored in this special topic of child institutionalization.
Key Points

Lumos estimates that 80 to 90 percent of children in these institutions actually have at least one living family member, oftentimes even a living parent. We know that there is no substitute for a family setting in the growth and safety of a child.
Voluntourism, or volunteer tourism, is where someone visits a country and pays to go volunteer at the orphanage for a very short time frame. While the tourists think their money is going towards helping the children, it actually ends up in the pockets of directors.
Voluntourism additionally leads to child finders, meaning people go into local, impoverished villages and incentivize children to go into these institutions for more tourist opportunities.
Ill-managed institutions can consist of institutional complicity, where the actual organization itself that's running the institution is guilty in organizing or somehow facilitating the trafficking of the residents in the institution.
In regards to donations, make sure the organizations are legitimate by informing yourself on their credentials, policies, and ultimately what's really happening there.
As a result of a lack of family environment, children leaving or aging out of institutions have increased vulnerability because they are starved for attention, lack a social support network, do not have social maturities such as trust appropriateness, and overall fall short in managing risk.

Resources

TIP Report - PDF
TIP Report - More Resources
192 – What is the Trafficking in Persons Report
161 – Orphan Care in Tanzania with Brandon Stiver
132 – Ensure Justice: Principle and Practice
Lumos Organization 
Disability Rights International 
Charity Navigator

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 193, Child Institutionalization and Human Trafficking.

Production Credits: [00:00:10] 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: [00:00:37] And this is the show where we empower you to study the issues, be a voice, and make a difference in ending human trafficking. On the last episode of 192, we talked about the Trafficking in Persons Report with our guests Chad Salitan and he is returning here on this episode. Chad is in the State Department's Trafficking in Persons office as the deputy coordinator for the reports and political affairs section. He works with the management team to lead the U.S. government's diplomatic engagement on sex trafficking and forced labor. If you didn't listen to episode 192, it's a great starting point to the Trafficking in Persons Report. And Sandie, we're going to dive in a bit on one of the key topics in the report here.

Sandie: [00:01:22] Welcome back, Chad.

Chad: [00:01:24] Thank you.

Sandie: [00:01:25] We are looking at some of the special topics and I'm sure we could do an entire series of podcasts, but one of them that particularly impacted me,
Released:
Mar 4, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The Global Center for Women and Justice launched the Ending Human Trafficking podcast in 2011. Our hosts are Dr. Sandie Morgan and Dr. Dave Stachowiak. Our mantra is Study the Issues. Be a voice. Make a difference. We believe that if you do not study first, you may say or do the wrong thing.