NOUVELLES FORMES DE LA TRAITE DES ETRES HUMAIN
Dragos Chilea and
Andreea Georgiana Enache
Additional contact information
Dragos Chilea: Maitre de conferences, Universite "Petru Maior" de Targu-Mures, ROUMANIE.
Andreea Georgiana Enache: Avocat, Barreau de Constanta, ROUMANIE.
Curentul Juridic, The Juridical Current, Le Courant Juridique, 2011, vol. 45, 55-70
Abstract:
New forms of human trafficking are: I. Trafficking and exploitation of slaves. Trafficking human beings is one method of obtaining slaves. Victims are typically recruited through deceit or trickery (such as a false job offer, false migration offer, or false marriage offer), sale by family members, recruitment by former slaves, or outright abduction. II. Traffic flows of workers in Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe and former Soviet Union, Turkey. In the case of trafficking of workers there is the sexual harassment, lack of employment contract, lack of freedom of association and the very low wages. III. Traffic by gifted people IV. Trafficking of children, eggs, embryos, adoptions, surrogate mothers, children. Child trafficking involves children around the world, both industrialized and developing countries. Children victims of trafficking are forced into prostitution are forced to marry or are illegally adopted. What is deeply troubling, in our era is the use of human bodies, biological substances, the need created by biomedical techniques, including techniques and procreative. The body is the subject of a genuine desire, first of all by those who are the beneficiaries of the market (intermediate agencies, institutes, clinics, unscrupulous doctors) and those whose applications are exacerbated by technology offerings. V. Women in sex exploitation, construction, heavy work, as children put to work or to beg. Trafficking of women and children is a reality that is both omnipresent and invisible. This invisibility has two origins, deeply rooted: the traditional view of gender inequality makes women's bodies use an object to sexual and reproductive, and the more liberal view that redefines some forms of sexual exploitation, such as prostitution as an occupation, the legitimate sale of "services" sex as a business and rebuilt the body of the woman as a consumer product. VI. The exploitation of the disabled VII. Organ trafficking, trafficking of human beings for transplants, organ transplant. The issue of organ trafficking most often refers to voluntary efforts of poor people who want the economic benefit of this medical procedure. VIII. Corneas and other organs trafficking. There is very little evidence of organ trafficking. Only journalistic sources disclose information on the subject, most often supported by the grassroots organizations. However, organs trafficking have been discovered in some European countries. IX. Internet Traffic, sex, pedo / porno graph. Organized crime has taken over the criminal market of trafficking in human beings. And most victims of human trafficking in Europe are women and girls trafficked for sexual exploitation. X. Traffic through companies advertising work abroad, dating, dance bands, ballet. The exploitation of women's bodies for reproductive functions or pleasure is a recurring motif of enslavement. XI. The exploitation on the Cote d'Azur, in the biggest casinos, luxury hotels but also the seat towns in miserable places.
Keywords: human trafficking; exploitation; sexual harassment; prostitution; biomedical techniques; organ transplant; economic benefit; organ trafficking; sexual exploitation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: K14 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:pmu:cjurid:v:45:y:2011:p:55-70
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