Presenter
Charles Pendlebury
Deputy Sheriff/Task Force Officer
Homeland Security for the NH Human Trafficking Task Force, Manchester, NH
Learning Outcome(s)
At the conclusion of this learning activity, (at least 75% of) participants will be able to discuss updates related to appropriate intervention for victims of human trafficking as viewed through the lens of Homeland Security.
Disclosure
The activity director(s), planning committee member(s), speaker(s), author(s) or anyone in a position to control the content for this activity have reported NO financial relationship(s)* with ineligible companies**.
* A “financial relationship" includes employee, researcher (named as the PI), consultant, advisor, speaker, independent contractor (including contracted research), royalties or patent beneficiary, executive role, and/or an ownership interest (not including stocks owned in a managed portfolio).
** An ineligible company is any entity whose primary business is producing, marketing, selling, re-selling, or distributing healthcare products used by or on patients.
Bibliographic Resources
• Alliance 87 (2017). Global Estimates of Modern Slavery. http://www.alliance87.org/global_estimates_of_modern_slavery-forced_labour_and_forced_marriage.pdf
• Recognizing the Signs. (2017, February 21). http://humantraffickinghotline.org/what-human-trafficking/recognizing-signs
• Murphy , L. (2016). Labor and Sex Trafficking among homeless youth. Retrieved from https://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/ht/murphy-labor-sex-trafficking-homeless-youth.pdf
• United States of America: Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000 [United States of America], Public Law 106-386 [H.R. 3244], 28 October 2000