Human Trafficking Awareness Day
Addressing a critical concern, awareness initiatives strive to liberate lives and foster a world free from exploitation.
Mobilize corporate social responsibility and employee engagement through awareness campaigns and community partnerships that position your organization as a champion against human trafficking.
- #WearBlue campaign: encourage employees to share photos wearing blue with trafficking awareness messaging
- Partner with DHS Blue Campaign to distribute training toolkits and resources to staff and communities
- Host internal awareness events or webinars featuring trafficking survivors and prevention experts
- Create shareable social content highlighting how businesses and individuals can report suspicious activity
Described by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, human trafficking is “gathering, moving, receiving or keeping human beings by force, coercion, threat or deception, for exploitative purposes.”
While human trafficking has been a part of the dark underbelly of societies throughout human history, many people have turned a blind eye to it and assumed that human trafficking was abolished in the modern world along with legal slavery. But, although slavery is no longer legal in any place in the world, sadly, human trafficking still takes place in every country.
With the help of the internet, in the early 2000s the problem of human trafficking simply received the spotlight it so desperately needed. It was in 2000 that the United Nations passed its Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children. That same year the US passed its Trafficking Victims Protection Act and the US government committed to combating human trafficking.
Human Trafficking Awareness Day was declared by the United States Congress in 2007. In addition, since 2010 every US President has dedicated the month of January to National Human Trafficking Prevention.
Fight Human Trafficking
Because this is such a widespread problem, individuals may think that there’s not much they can do to help. But that’s not true! In fact, the fight against human trafficking is often helped by average people who are dedicated to being citizens who are conscious and aware. The Blue Campaign website, organized by the Department of Homeland Security, provides a number of different resources for individuals, groups, schools and businesses to reduce human trafficking in their communities. Options for resources include signing up for the campaign newsletter, downloading shareable training materials and toolkits, accessing resources for victims, attending events, ordering printed materials and so much more.
Wear Blue
One of the important ways that Human Trafficking Awareness Day is recognized through the Department of Homeland Security is through the Wear Blue campaign. On this day, the campaign invites individuals and groups to take photos of themselves wearing blue and then share it on social media to raise awareness about the problem of human trafficking. Use the hashtag for the day and invite others to celebrate and show support for the end of human trafficking in this way.