1 / 8

Lessons from the Trafficking Victims Re/integration Programme (TVRP ) 2007 - 2014

Lessons from the Trafficking Victims Re/integration Programme (TVRP ) 2007 - 2014. Fabrice de Kerchove, Project manager, KBF EU Closed door workshop Brussels, Belgium June 30, 2015. TVRP scope and investment.

jonathan
Download Presentation

Lessons from the Trafficking Victims Re/integration Programme (TVRP ) 2007 - 2014

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. Lessons from the Trafficking Victims Re/integration Programme (TVRP) 2007 - 2014 Fabrice de Kerchove, Project manager, KBF EU Closed door workshop Brussels, Belgium June 30, 2015

  2. TVRP scope and investment Since 2007 in Albania, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Romania and Serbia, since 2009 in Kosovo and since 2012 in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Grants totalling1.5M€awarded to 15 NGOs in seven countries between 2007 and 2014 In 2011, the German Development Cooperation Agency (Deutsche GesellschaftfürInternationaleZusammenarbeit - GIZ ) co-funder of the TVRP

  3. Key results 1711trafficking victims assisted Assisted 26% of identified trafficking victims in the region 1179secondary beneficiaries 296male victims and 651trafficked children Successful re/integration of approximately 60% of beneficiaries Re-trafficking of approximately 17% of beneficiaries Establishment of 4 social enterprises to fund re/integration efforts in three countries

  4. Key impacts Preventedre-traffickingthroughre/integration support Re/integration services for different victims (men, women, children) and victims of different forms of trafficking Trafficking victims and potential victims Victim’s input solicited Monitoringtool and indicators Enhanced cooperation, agreements and partnerships with government partners Diversified funding for re/integration programmes toward sustainability

  5. Recommendations for the future More attention to identification Greater understanding of failed re/integration and re-trafficking Higher levels of funding for re/integration work Longer timeframe Stronger involvement of governments Strengthened coordination of reintegration service providers at national and local level

  6. Life beyondtrafficking Nadja, 24 from Stip, Macedonia “My currentsituation is far awayfrommy past experience. It’s somethingcompletely new. Currently, I live independentlyin anapartment... I work at a full time job... I have a monthlysalarythathelps me satisfymyneeds. Currently, the thing I love most in my life actually is my job. I never thought I willwork in a decent company with a hugenumber of staffand a verydynamicworkactivity. I amveryexcitedaboutthat. It is verychallengingfor me. With [the organisation’s] support, my life changed a lot and I had obviousprogress in almosteverydimension of life.I just have to keep that in mind and do my best. I will never forgethowmuch I suffered. This is the first time in my life that I have startedtothinkaboutmyfuture. For the first time I believe I can do things on myown... I suffered a lot andit was sodifficultfor me toachievethis stage, where as [the organisation] taught me tofeel empowered. That’swhy I am telling youthatmy life changed a lot. I amso happy”.

More Related