Toolkit to Combat Trafficking in Persons
- Document number
- 1756
- Date
- 2008
- Title
- Toolkit to Combat Trafficking in Persons
- Author/publisher
- UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), United Nations
- Availability
- View/save PDF version of this document
- Document type(s)
- Training Material/Resources,
- Keywords
- Definition of (trafficking), Sexual Exploitation, Slave Labour, Child Trafficking, Assistance, Prevention, Information Campaigns, Awareness Raising, Return, Reintegration, Reflection Period, Prosecution, Law Enforcement, Multi-agency approach, Palermo protocol; Global Programme Against Trafficking in Persons,
- Summary
- The overarching goals of this Toolkit are those of the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress andPunish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, supplementing the UnitedNations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime.Specifically, the Toolkit is intended to provide guidance, showcase promising practice andrecommend resources in the thematic areas addressed by chapters on:I. International legal frameworkII. Problem assessment and strategy developmentIII. Legislative frameworkIV. International criminal justice cooperationV. Law enforcement and prosecutionVI. Victim identificationVII. Immigration status of victims and their return and reintegrationVIII. Victim assistanceIX. Prevention of trafficking in personsX. Monitoring and evaluationThe English language version of the Toolkit to Combat Trafficking in Persons is available on the web:http://www.unodc.org/unodc/human-trafficking/latest-news.html
- Related documents
- Compilation of the Main Legal Instruments and Analytical Reports dealing with Trafficking in Human Beings at International, Regional and National Levels. VOLUME II (National texts)
- Online Toolkit to Combat Trafficking in Persons. Chapter 6 - Victim Identification
- Toolkit to Combat Trafficking in Persons
- Working with the United Nations Human Rights Programme A Handbook for Civil Society
- Trafficking in Persons. Global Patterns
- Guidance on representing trafficked persons in compensation claims