1 / 16

Practice with people who’ve experienced human trafficking : The challenges of intersectoral collaboration

Practice with people who’ve experienced human trafficking : The challenges of intersectoral collaboration. Jill Hanley et Alexandra Ricard-Guay Université McGill, École de service social. Responding to human trafficking in Québec.

berit
Download Presentation

Practice with people who’ve experienced human trafficking : The challenges of intersectoral collaboration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Practice with people who’veexperiencedhumantrafficking: The challenges of intersectoral collaboration Jill Hanley et Alexandra Ricard-Guay Université McGill, École de service social

  2. Responding to humantrafficking in Québec • Development of services for victims of humantrafficking • Coalitions and partnerships in Canada • Differentmodels and strategies • Positive outcomes and best practices • Challenges, dilemmas and debates

  3. Research objectives and methodology Pan-Canadian qualitative research project (funded by Justice Canada 2012-2014) Research objectives: • Better understand existing services and the approaches to intervention • Document local responses and experiences of inter-sectoral collaboration • Identify best practices Methodology: • 80 interviews with individuals in 10 provinces: • Frontline workers (community, police, health and social services, judiciary) • Coalition or collaboration coordinators

  4. Intersectoral collaboration:what are wetalking about?

  5. Anti-traffickingMosaïc Help Us Help The Children Anti-Trafficking Initiative (HUHTC-ATI) Hope For The Sold International Justice Mission Canada MAST - Men Against Sex Trafficking REED - Resist Exploitation Embrace Dignity The Ratanak Foundation Future Group Temple Committee Against Human Trafficking Canada Fights Human Trafficking Ontario Coalition AgainstHumanTrafficking Stop the Trafficking Coalition PACT – Ottawa CATHII CommunityYouth Network (CYN) / Coalition Against the Sexual Exploitation of Youth (CASEY) Rotary Club of Toronto Women’s Initiative Domestic Human Trafficking Project Canadian Women Foundation national task force on human trafficking Anti-trafficking Committee/Network of the Canadian Council for Refugees • Alliance Against Modern Slavery • Beyond Borders (ECPAT Canada)/ Au-delà des frontières • Chab Dai Canada • Canada fights human trafficking • Defend Dignity • End Modern Slavery - Canadian Advocacy • Face It Canada :  Take a stand against human trafficking • FREE-THEM • Half the Sky/Les Affranchies • Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women (GAATW- Canada) • Hamilton Ends Human trafficking • Stop Child TraffickingNow • HumanTraffickingAwarenessPartnership • Sarnia Lambton CommitteeAgainst the Trafficking of Women and Children

  6. National • Provincial • Regional • Municipal and • Local • Gouvernmental • Community • Formal/Informal

  7. British Columbia: Office to Combat Trafficking in Persons OCTIP (2007) • Alberta: Action Coalition on HumanTrafficking (2007) • Manitoba: Tracia’s Trust: Manitoba’sSexual Exploitation Strategy (2002) • Ontario: • WeFight: Windsor Essex Fighting the International Growth of Human Trafficking (2004) • Ottawa Coalition to End Human Trafficking (2011) • London Anti-HumanTraffickingCommittee • Toronto Counter Human Trafficking Network (2011) • Coalition Against Human Trafficking (2011) • Québec: Coalition québécoise contre la traite des personnes (2011) • New-Brunswick : New Brunswick HumanTraffickingTask Force (2007) • Nova Scotia: Nova ScotiaCommittee on HumanTrafficking • Prince Edward Island: PEI HumanTraffickingCommittee • Newfoundland: Newfoundland HumanTraffickingCommittee (2007)

  8. Mandates and keyactivities • Exchange of information on trafficking trends and related to specific cases. • Mutual referrals and sharing of resources to support victims (more efficient use of existing services within the community) • Coordination of services, including case management • Public education and training of frontline workers and policymakers • Rights advocacy and promotion of policies that support victims of human trafficking

  9. Intersectoral collaboration: putting itinto practice

  10. Positive outcomes of collaboration • Mobilisation and development of collaboration between organizations who previously worked in silos; • Among frontline workers, better knowledge of existing resources, development of personal relationships that support referrals; • Development of trust between sectors unused to working together (police/community) • Facilitation of referrals along a continuum of services across several sectors • Development of tools adapted to local needs

  11. Main challenges facinginter-sectoral collaboration • Lack of resources • Time and human resources • Sustainability of initiatives • Developing trust between different sectors • Understanding the limits and possibility of different groups’ mandates • Respecting confidentiality and the limits of some types of information exchange • Differences related to the definition of human trafficking and the language used around it • Huge diversity of actors; sometimes “too many cooks in the kitchen” • Communication

  12. GoingforwardwithIntersectoral collaboration

  13. So what are the best practices related to intersectoral collaboration? • Signing clear collaboration agreements? • Having one point of entry for services, or many? • Having the coalition take on case management? • Having a permanent office with dedicated paid staff? • Finding the resources?

  14. Conclusion: collaboration iskey but the debates and dilemmas are far from over • Prostitution = trafficking? • Sexual exploitation vs. Forced work • Trafficking-specific services or integration with other issues? • International vs. internal trafficking • Degree of cooperation between community and police? • Have victims of trafficking become the “deserving undocumented”? Immigration hardlines • Does attention on trafficking take attention/resources/public sympathy away from other groups? • To what extent is the term “trafficking” even useful?!?

  15. Merci!/Thankyou! Jill Hanley: jill.hanley@mcgill.ca Alexandra Ricard-guay: alexandra.ricard-guay@mail.mcgill.ca; aricard@cathii.org

More Related