Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/sociology/1481814-socialization
https://studentshare.org/sociology/1481814-socialization.
Profitable businesses produce wealth to the economy and enhance more oppression upon the slaves. For example, cheap labor provided by children in Asian countries like China bolsters foreign trade, as the cost of manufacturing is kept to the minimum low while he returns are tremendously high. Despite the attractive impacts on business investment, human trafficking brings about some sense of unpredictability in various sectors of the economy. The practice reduces the chances of meaningful jobs for potential formal employees, and keeps the traffickers unsettled for fear of being discovered.
Sexual slaves grapple with squalid conditions in their detention centers, increasing their likelihood of contracting diseases. The deplorable conditions of human trafficking can be attributed to the illegal nature of the practice, and the inability of the victims to enjoy better access to health and safety amenities. Moreover, human trafficking also generates class divides and conflicts, thus aggravating mortality in several countries across the world. Secondly, Social Class also defines the problem of human trafficking. . In their new environments, they turn out to be fodder for heartless, influential traffickers who entice them with overly attractive, but false offers.
Trafficked people normally are cajoled with impractical offers of placements, better remuneration, security and a rise in social class. When they eventually reach their destination, they realize they were lied to when the great offers turn out to be unending persecution by members of the higher social class. Human traffickers are members of influential criminal networks that blend transfer of populations for cheap labor with drug trafficking to be wealthy enough to have a better bargaining chip over their illegal businesses.
Conversely, victims of human trafficking usually belong to lower social class, and that is the main reason for their being most vulnerable. Eradicating human trafficking Owing to the global scale of human trafficking, there should be a concerted effort by all countries to root out the problem. It is estimated that victims of trafficking from 127 nations are subjected to unfair treatment and exploitation in over 135 countries around the world. The rampant nature of the problem calls for a change in mindset as a way of eradicating the social problem.
The solutions include: firstly, different societies across the world should perceive women as human beings rather than objects. If the stereotypes against women stopped, women will enjoy gender parity in the economy and claim the much needed dignity they deserve (Clifford, 2004). This would lead to their empowerment and involvement in decision-making processes for a uniform development, thus lower cases of gender conflict and their trafficking. Secondly, owing to the fact that
...Download file to see next pages Read More