Handel z Forex Copy, MQL5, atau Zulutrade Bagus Anda malas menganalisa market. sehingga anda ingin menyerahkan sepenuhnya dengan mengikuti handel orang lain atau suatu dostawca sygnału yang notabene katanya adalah 8220orang sukses8221 ataupun 8220juaranya trading8221, tapi apakah benar bisa Zulutrade ataupun Forex Skopiuj adalah suu fit dunia forex yang dimana kita dapat mengikuti jej handel handjar dari orang lain ataupun suatu dostawca sygnału dan meng-copy nya ke dalam account trading kita. Beberapa varian penyedia kopiować handel ini adalah: Memang hal seperti Zulu ataupun semacam Trade Kopiowanie ini merupakan suatu fitur yang menarik, tetapi jangan terus anda beranggapan bahwa mengikuti Zulu atau Forex Kopiuj maka anda bisa sukses pula. Itu anggapan yang salah dan bisa menjerumuskan jika tidak memahami sistemnya secara mendetail. Seminarium Beberapa forex warsztaty forex, ataupun broker bahkan perushaan malah ada yang meng-agungkan dan menonjolkan fitur cara kopia ini z hasłem promosinya adalah mengikuti sang juara trading, tetapi justru itu nanti akan semakin menjerumuskan JIKA anda tidak mengetahui rejestr wyników dan cara kerjanya secara pasti , karena pada prakteknya tidak semudah janji-janjinya, dan TIDAK MENJAMIN pasti sukses. Yang tambah runyam pun juga lebih banyak (belum lagi harga seminarnya yang selangit. Tentunya tidak sebanding z apa yang didapat, selain itu ada pula yang terdapat extra białko komisi dla menggunakan fitur ini) Kalau i menyelidiki lebih dalam pada dostawca sygnału di Zulutrade ataupun semacam penyedia Forex Copy yang lain, bahwa banyak yang trade z Zulu atau Forex Kopiuj itu adalah para trader yang menggunakan konto demo dan kemudian memberikan sygnał dla diikuti oleh orang lain berdasarkan konto demonya tsb, jadi bisa anda bayangkan bahayanya. Dan mereka bisa saja 8220beruntung8221 berhasil sesaat, tetapi di beberapa hari beberapa bulan kedepan justru malah hancur. Apalagi jika śpiewała sygnał adalah menggunakan suatu metode scalping ataupun martingale (dużo melipat) yang anda tidak bisa mengikutinya. Selain itu, jika anda amati, maka sering juga terjadi perpindahan dari Peringkat Ranga yang tertinggi melorot ke Ranga yang lebih bawah di beberapa hari kemudian bahkan seringkali menghilang karena loss dan margin call. Hałas musi być podłączony do telefonu komórkowego, który wysyła sygnał do operatora, aby uzyskać połączenie z Internetem, interkoneksi, ataupun perbedaan broker yang juga turut mempengaruhi trading anda. Anda boleh-boleh saja menggunakan seperti Zulu ataupun sejenis Forex Kopiuj ini, tetapi hal itu tidak semudah membalik telapak tangan. Dan bila anda awam akan trading forex, maka sebaiknya belajarlah dahulu z tekun dan kuasailah dahulu dunia trading Forex ini sebelum anda menggunakan fitur yang aneh-aneh. Disamping itu, perhatikan juga akan faktor komisi trading ataupun biaya tambahan yang dikenakan di Zulu ataupun Forex Copier ini bila anda menggunakannya. Jadi jika anda menderita loss ataupun profit maka komisi tersebut akan tetap berjalan, jadi anda harus memperhitungkan hal ini pula. Hal-hal yang perlu diwaspadai ketika menggunakan Forex Kopiowanie ini: Ketidak konsystenan suatu sygnał providernya (bulan ini bagus, belum tentu besok dia bagus terus) Perampokan komisi dari dostawca sygnału yang tidak benar yang dimana seringkali ada beberapa dostawca sygnału tersebut terakhirnya sengaja trading secara membabi buta dla 8220merampok8221 komisi dari para followernya, setelah itu dia non aktif, dan atau berpindah berganti nama lain dla mencari mangsa baru Faktor kecepatan interkoneksi yang dimana bisa menghambat penyampaian order dari signal master ke followernya Faktor dari broker bandar yang sengaja bisa memutuskan interkoneksinya dari si master signal ke beberapa followernya agar kalah. Pemilihan broker yang ben dan kredibel juga sangat penting Konto handlowe i adalah pasrah mengikuti Sygnału Providernya, sehingga jika anda ingin berhenti maka benar benar-benar pastikan berhenti, atau uang ia dapat tersedot terus ataupun habis tergerus komisinya Waspada z dostawcą sygnału yang menggunakan teknik scalping (ambil TPSL kecil-kecil), karena hal itu akan susah diikuti, mengingat bisa terjadi faktor delay di eksekusi ordernya Jangan mengikuti dostawca sygnału yang menggunakan suu teknik penggandaan atau pelipatan volume lot (martingale), karena anda tidak akan bisa mengikutinya dengan baik Perhatikan nilai deposit dan penggunaan volume lot dari suu sygnał dostawca sebelum mengikutinya Waspada z dostawcą sygnału yang menggunakan konto demo, karena seringkali terjadi penyimpangan Lebih baik anda telah mengenal si sygnał tersebut ataupun mengetahui cara kerjanya terlebih dahulu, maka barulah anda mengikutinya. Intinya kenalilah dahulu signal tersebut, atau test dulu di konto demo selama beberapa bulan sebelum diterapkan ke prawdziwe konto. Dan harap diingat bahwa kunci sukses bertrading adalah BUKAN karena faktor meng-copy handel orang lain ataupun faktor signal, tetapi kunci to suses itu adalah di faktor Risk Managementnya (Money Management) i Pengetahuan Trading yang Baik dan Berpengalaman. Anda boleh saja mencoba menggunakan Zulu ataupun Forex Kopiuj ini agar dapat mengetahuinya, karena kalau tidak 8220mencicipi8221 maka juga tidak akan tahu suka dukanya. Dan kami informasikan bahwa fitur seperti Zulutrade, eToro, PAMM, Mirror, Copy Trader, handel społeczny, Sirix Trader, ataupun Forex Copy ini tidak menjamin anda pasti sukses ya, dan jangan percaya z perkataan gombal di seminar forex ataupun tawaran-tawaran yang terlihat menggiurkan dan tidak masuk akal ya. (pikir logis dahulu dan jangan terbawa emosi dan nafsu) Wydawca maaf mas. mau nanya, pekan lalu sy ditwari sma teman auto copy trade, yg mungkin sm dgn zulu trade, tp kayaknya di padukan dgn sistem MLM, coba mas lihat di mocaz i triplelinefx, tolong di infokan mas sistem yg dia mau jual, trus terang sy masih handlować dgn analisa tekhnikal. mskipun masih sering los tp sy rasa ada kpuasan sendiri krn sambil belajar, hanya sy sy si trus blajar dgn analisa news (podstawowe), mudah2an bisa dipadukan, thanks mas atas info2x yg brmanfaat di web ini, yg banyak mmbrikan pencerahan ke kpd kami smua trkhusus sprti kami yg pemula, salam sukses Wah hati2 loh, sebab sistem dia nggak tahu bisa dipercaya atau tidak, karena kami lihat mereka itu terdaftarnya di Brytyjska wyspa dziewicza. kemudyjski mocaz ini nge-charge kita komisi na zewnątrz agar bisa dibagikan ke jaringan MLM nya, nah ngapain begitu Pak, sebab kita handel disini tujuannya dla cari białko serendah2nya agar bisa zysk maksimum, nah kalau ada charge besar ngapain Pak. kemudyjski dostawca sygnału mereka tidak sebanyak dan sesolid seperti halnya Zulu loh. beda calau dengan Zulutrade yang benar2 terlisensi dan lebih murah dari mocaz, dkk nya tsb. Kalau kami pribadi sih tidak menyarankan karena trading itu ya trading, nggak bisa digabung den MLM, sebab kalau digabung den MLM pasti Trader akan terbebani denny besar yang dimana itu nggak ada gunanya. Mistrz saya mau tanya: 1. apa itu ROI forex 2. dengan modalny 1000 najlepszych zestawów transakiny, apabila saya hania 1 kali otwarty na transaksinya agar tida cepat terkena margines call 3.kalau di fxdd ada feenya tidak per transaksinya 4.saya baru mencoba demo akun fxdd, kalau mau live acount apa saja yang perlu disiapkan agar tidak langsung terkena margin call. 5.saya minta saran master, para mana yang dipilih gbpusd atau eurusd, apabila saya menyukai strategi buy bottom sell top sory master banyak pertanyaan karena masih belajar, he..hee 1. Return On Investment, yaitu rasio nilai pengembalian modal 2. itu tergantung strategi trading anda 3. kami juga trade di sana melalui gainscope dan tidak ada fee 4. pahami dulu cara bertrading dan kuasai dulu mengenai strategi trading forex dan dasarnya. jadi harus menjadi ahlinya dulu ya. kalau sekedar ngawur2 dan sembarangan ya sekejap saja akan loss terus 5. semua pair itu bagus Pak, tergantung anda cocok yang mana dan menguasai yang mana. nggak bisa semudah yang tinggal anda sebut buy bottom sprzedam top, itu dimana2 juga maunya begitu hehe, tetapi implementasinya tidak akan bisa mudah mengetahui ini sudah bottom atau top harganya Kopiuj trading sama z bettinggambling apapun kedoknya 1 triliun nggak jelas. (saya juga hampir pernah coba di eToro). reperowanie juga kalo strata handlu sendiri dapat pengalaman makin bagus sih (walaupun stres juga heheh ..) dan paling top notowania handlu wiadomościami ekonomicznymi (peluangnya jelas nggak tiap waktu). Nggak usah ngoyo8230.dulu saya pakai 5 miesięcy temu indikator pusing seratus keliling8230sekarang nolk peru banyak2 cukup 2 saja..kadang malah tanpa indikator lagi karena reguły-nya sudah sangat jelas, tuż po wiadomościach gospodarczych wynik, jadi cukup santai tradingnya. Mantap Brokerforex kasih ilmu gratis. Met siang Master8230. Mau usul neh8230. 1. Gimana kalau Master bikin signal dla kita-kita ini, biar bisa kami ikuti trading nya Mistrz, meski tentu kami tetap juga melakukan analisa sendiri seggi yg Mistrz ajarkan sbg perbandingan dan dla lebih mendalami lagi Karena kami sangat percaya sama Master. 2. Seandainya Master mau kasih inwestować hasło nya, pasti kami akan sangat senang deh hehe8230. Maaf ya Master, ini sekedar usulan aja lo, maaf lagi kalau usulan saya ini dianggap ngawur dan lancang y8230.terimakasih .. 1. kita tidak bisa bikin signal, karena bisnis kami bukan di sygnał penyedia, dan juga jam online kami di situs ini juga tidak menentu, jadi kami rasa susah. Apalagi web ini tidak bersifat komersil dan kami juga tidak mau menjadi beban harus menyediakan signal tersebut. Selain itu, kami juga telah memberikan 8220cara memancing ikannya8221 kan. 2. Hal ini juga tidak bisa, karena bisa membahayakan keluarga kami dari ancaman para mafia2 tersebut. Blog internetowy kami ini juga sudah diserang berkali2 hhh dhan sudah tidak terhitung lagi ancaman2 jahat yang kami terima mengenai keselamatan kami akibat melawan mereka. Jadi mohon maaf Pak. mungkin następnym razem siapa tahu ya. Tapi dla saat ini kami tidak berani, karena ancaman2 tersebut. dan yang hania bııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııımıııııııııııımınıkıııııııımıııııııımıııııııımııııızıııııııııııııııılıkıınılıkııkııınınılıkııkıınınıkııkııkııkııkııkııkııkııkııkıkııkııııııkııkıııııııııııkıııııınınınınınınınınınını. Wejście ekspresowe 10 listopada 2018 r. Imigracja, uchodźcy i obywatelstwo Kanada (IRCC) dokonała modernizacji Kompleksowego Systemu Rankingu (CRS) dla systemu selekcji imigracji Express Entry. Zmiany, których spodziewano się od pewnego czasu, będą miały znaczny wpływ na kandydatów do migracji do Kanady za pośrednictwem trzech programów federalnych zarządzanych przez Express Entry, a mianowicie Federal Skilled Worker Class. klasa Federal Skilled Trades. i kanadyjska klasa doświadczenia. Nowe instrukcje dotyczące Express Entry, które zostały opublikowane w oficjalnym dzienniku Canada8217, wchodzą w życie w dniu 19 listopada 2018 r. Znaczące zmiany w ofertach pracy są następujące: kwalifikująca się oferta pracy jest obecnie warta 200 punktów, jeśli oferta znajduje się w ofercie zawód zawarty w Grupie Głównej 00 Krajowej Klasyfikacji Zawodowej (najwyższe stanowisko kierownicze). Te zawody są następujące: 0011 Prawodawcy 0012 Starsi kierownicy rządowi i urzędnicy 0013 Starsi menedżerowie 8211 usługi finansowe, komunikacyjne i inne usługi biznesowe 0014 Starsi menedżerowie 8211 służby zdrowia, edukacji, usług społecznych i społecznych oraz organizacje członkowskie 0015 Dyrektorzy wyższego szczebla 8211 handel, działalność nadawcza i inne usługi gdzie indziej niesklasyfikowane sklasyfikowany. 0016 Kierownicy wyższego szczebla 8211 budownictwo, transport, produkcja i media Oferta pracy kwalifikacyjnej jest obecnie warta 50 punktów, jeśli oferta jest jakąkolwiek inną kwalifikującą się ofertą zorganizowanego zatrudnienia. Wcześniej kwalifikowane oferty pracy obsługiwane przez ocenę wpływu na rynek pracy były warte 600 punktów w ramach KSR. Od 19 listopada kandydaci z kwalifikującymi się ofertami pracy otrzymają 200 lub 50 punktów. w zależności od pozycji. Ponadto niektórzy posiadacze pozwolenia na pracę mogą otrzymywać punkty za swoją ofertę pracy, nawet jeśli nie uzyskali LMIA (uwaga: posiadacze LMIA będą nadal otrzymywać punkty za ofertę pracy). Oprócz posiadaczy LMIA, nowe regulacje pozwalają również na przyznawanie punktów za kwalifikującą się ofertę pracy następującym osobom: Osoby posiadające pozwolenie na pracę wydane na mocy umowy międzynarodowej, takie jak Północnoamerykańska Umowa o wolnym handlu (NAFTA). Osoby posiadające pozwolenie na pracę wydane na podstawie znaczących korzyści dla kryteriów Kanady, takich jak transfer wewnątrz firmy. W obu powyższych przypadkach pracownik musi pracować w Kanadzie przez co najmniej jeden rok, a oferta pracy musi być złożona przez tego samego pracodawcę, który jest wymieniony w zezwoleniu na pracę. Pełną listę można przejrzeć w poniższej tabeli. Wreszcie, wymóg dotyczący czasu pracy również zmienił się z nieokreślonego na co najmniej jeden rok. Pracownicy obecnie przebywający w Kanadzie: Czy pozwolenie na pracę jest do zaakceptowania przez Express Entry Poniższa tabela pokazuje, którzy zagraniczni pracownicy w Kanadzie mogą uzyskać punkty za ofertę pracy. Kanadyjskie badania mają teraz znaczenie Punkty, które mają zostać przypisane do kanadyjskiego wykształcenia są następujące: 0 punktów. jeśli cudzoziemiec ma wykształcenie gimnazjalne 15 punktów. jeżeli cudzoziemiec ma kwalifikowane kwalifikacje z jednorocznego lub dwuletniego programu pomaturalnego i 30 punktów. jeżeli cudzoziemiec posiada: kwalifikowane kwalifikacje z programu pomaturalnego ukończenia trzech lat lub więcej, kwalifikowane kwalifikacje z programu na poziomie uniwersyteckim na poziomie magisterskim lub na poziomie stopnia zawodowego zawód wymieniony w macierzy klasyfikacji zawodowej na poziomie umiejętności A, dla której wymagane jest uzyskanie licencji przez prowincjonalny organ regulacyjny lub kwalifikowane kwalifikacje z programu na poziomie uniwersyteckim na poziomie doktoratu. Punkty są przyznawane tylko za doświadczenie w Kanadzie, jeśli w celu zdobycia referencji cudzoziemiec: studiował w Kanadzie w kanadyjskiej instytucji edukacyjnej, zapisał się na pełne studia lub szkolenie przez co najmniej osiem miesięcy i był fizycznie obecny w Kanadzie przez co najmniej osiem miesięcy. Przed tymi zmianami nie było dostępnych dodatkowych punktów dla studentów kierunków międzynarodowych, którzy ukończyli program studiów w Kanadzie. Zmiany odzwierciedlają cel rządów polegający na zapewnieniu prostszych ścieżek dla stałych mieszkańców międzynarodowym studentom i absolwentom w Kanadzie. Zaproszenia do aplikowania Kandydatów, którzy otrzymają Zaproszenie do Stania się (ITA) na pobyt stały, będą mieli dodatkowy czas na złożenie kompletnego wniosku do Imigracji, Uchodźców i Obywatelstwa Kanady (IRCC). Podczas gdy wcześniej ITA była ważna przez 60 dni, kandydaci będą mieli 90 dni na złożenie wniosku po otrzymaniu ITA. Konsekwencje dla kandydatów w puli 19 listopada, IRCC może automatycznie wprowadzić te zmiany dla profili znajdujących się już w puli Express Entry. W wielu przypadkach kandydaci mogą zauważyć, że liczba przyznanych im punktów KSR nie wzrosła. Jednak kandydaci, którzy nie mają oferty pracy, powinni pamiętać, że ich profil, mimo że może zawierać taką samą liczbę punktów jak poprzednio, może stać się bardziej konkurencyjny, szczególnie w przypadku kandydatów z ofertami pracy opartymi na LMIA, którzy widzą, że ich wyniki spadają nawet o 550 zwrotnica. Pula Express Entry jest konkurencyjnym środowiskiem, w którym profile kandydatów8217 są uszeregowane względem siebie, a kandydaci z najwyższą pozycją są w lepszej pozycji, aby otrzymać ITA podczas losowania. Od 19 listopada wartość oferty pracy spadnie z 600 punktów do 200 lub 50 punktów (w zależności od oferowanej pozycji). Raport IRCC8217s Express Entry z 2018 r., Opublikowany na początku tego roku, pokazał, że spośród 31.063 ITA wydanych w ubiegłym roku, 14 465 (46,6) zostało wydanych kandydatom, którzy mieli ofertę pracy wspieraną przez LMIA. W konsekwencji wpływ ostatnich zmian na KSR może znacznie zmienić skład puli i liczbę kandydatów z ofertą pracy, którzy otrzymują ITA. Chociaż kandydaci posiadający ofertę pracy będą nadal otrzymywać znaczną liczbę punktów (50 lub 200, w zależności od stanowiska), kandydaci bez oferty pracy mogą zobaczyć swoje szanse na poprawę. Wojewódzkie Programy Nominacyjne (PNP) są obecnie najbardziej wartościowym czynnikiem Należy zauważyć, że kandydaci, którzy otrzymają certyfikat wyższej dyplomacji w ramach programu Wojewódzkich Nominacji (PNP), otrzymają nadal 600 punktów. Ponadto, kandydaci powinni pamiętać, że niedawno opublikowany plan imigracyjny IPCC8217 na rok 2017 ujawnił, że rząd Kanady chce przyjąć w przyszłym roku około 51 000 nowych imigrantów za pośrednictwem PNP, co oznacza 7-procentowy wzrost w stosunku do celu na rok 2018. Wraz z otwarciem większej liczby kategorii PNP i zmieniając się w czasie, jest prawdopodobnie ważniejsze niż kiedykolwiek wcześniej, aby kandydaci byli na bieżąco z tymi programami imigracyjnymi. Dostępny jest nowy kalkulator CRS Kandydaci w puli Express Entry, a także osoby zastanawiające się nad utworzeniem profilu Express Entry, mogą skorzystać z nowego i ulepszonego kalkulatora CRS, aby dowiedzieć się, jaki będzie ich wynik w nowym systemie punktowym. UWAGA: Artykuł ten będzie stale aktualizowany, gdy dowiemy się więcej o zmianach w KSR. Aby dowiedzieć się, czy masz prawo do emigracji do Kanady na stałe, wypełnij bezpłatny formularz oceny online. 2018 CICNews Wszelkie prawa zastrzeżone 13 listopada 2018 Otrzymałem lmię w zeszłym tygodniu, a przesyłkę ekspresową przesłałem w piątek. przypuszczam, że spodziewam się ITA wcześniej w przyszłym tygodniu, ponieważ ostatnie zaproszenie zostało wykonane przez 2nov. Czy myślisz, że będzie miał jeszcze jedną rundę zaproszeń przed rokiem19, to dla mnie taka zła wiadomość. Nieważne mówi 15 listopada 2018 r. Czy wiesz, ilu studentów spędził przynajmniej 50 000 na 2 lata nauki w Kanadzie? Czy wiesz, ilu uczniów po tym okresie pracowało na stanowiskach biurowych przez co najmniej 1 rok, a wszyscy ci uczniowie mogą otrzymać zaproszenie To jest FAIR teraz 17 listopada 2018 r. Rzeczywiście tak Pozdrawiam Trudeau 15 listopada 2018 To samo tutaj. W przyszły piątek przedstawiłem również EE. Jeśli nie ma już zaproszenia przed 19 listopada, I8217m wraca. 11 listopada 2018 r. Je m8217appelle. Mjd Alani Ne a Damas le 10 października 1992 r. Je suis diploma de la Facult de Pharmacie de l8217Universit de Damas pl 20182018 avec une moyenne 80.25 mentioned trs bien. jais passe l8217examen de magister avec une moyenne 82. J8217ai passe une periode trs difficile qui m8217a ma wbudowany moduł komunikacyjny, który jest przyczyną problemów i utrudnień związanych z mon tat de sant. J8217ai des problmes lis aux nerfs, je souffre de l8217existence d8217une grande masse dans ma colonne vertbrale. J8217ai subi plusiurs oprations pour radiac la masse mais a cause de sa grosseur et l8217endroit difficile. c8217est pour ce la qui l8217ont pas pu l8217pozostałe komplementarne ce qui ma przyczynę powikłań komplikacji. l8217incapacit de marcher et de faire des mouvements sans aide. Ainsi que des symptmes neurologiques comme: l8217incontinence urinaires et la perte de sensation et d8217autres .. Je veux immigrer au canada pour que je puisse continuer mes tudes en master i suivre mon cas de sant, et tre une perssone rentable dans la socit avec mes capacit . Palak Shah mówi, 11 listopada 2018 roku mam doświadczenie przełożonego 1 roku w Kanadzie. i obecnie pracuje w tej samej pozycji, więc dostanę tylko 50 punktów, ponieważ nie jest to zawód menedżerski 00, ale jeśli dostanę ofertę pracy na stanowisko kierownicze, będę kwalifikował się do 200 punktów 12 listopada 2018 r. Mam również takie same wątpliwości. Pracuję jako nadzorca usług gastronomicznych i planowałem ubiegać się o przesyłkę ekspresową pod kategorią CEC pod koniec tego miesiąca, ale teraz nie jestem w stanie przetworzyć moich dokumentów ze względu na mniej punktów. Ta zmiana zasad BĘDZIE MIAŁA WPŁYWA NA WSZYSTKIE LUDZIE, KTÓRZY DZIAŁAJĄ W KANADZIE W RAMACH TYMCZASOWEGO PROGRAMU PRACOWNIKÓW ZAGRANICZNYCH i jest to całkowicie rozczarowujące z mojego punktu widzenia8230. Właściwie ten rząd stara się nadać wyższy priorytet międzynarodowym studentom i jest to naprawdę cenne, ale w tym samym czasie osoby takie jak my, które pracują w ramach programu TFW, również powinny być brane pod uwagę. 11 grudnia 2018 r. Myślę, że studenci zagraniczni, którzy studiują absolwenta amp w Kanadzie, gdy otrzymają swoje zezwolenie na pracę, również uważali za pracownika czasowego obcokrajowca, nie są 1782 2018 r. To musi być stanowisko kierownicze wyższego szczebla bez daty zakończenia kontraktu Palak Shah, niż dostaniesz 200 punktów Joanne Marsden mówi 11 listopada 2018 Właśnie wróciłem z Kanady. Odwiedzam od ponad 20 lat moja siostra mieszkała tam 11 lat i jest obywatelką Kanady, mój syn jest na wizie 2-letniej pracy. Jestem wysoko w brytyjskiej służbie więziennej jako menedżer od 18 lat. Chciałbym zajrzeć do mojego 21-letniego syna i ubiegać się o stały pobyt w Kanadzie. Czy mógłbyś doradzić, jak sobie z tym poradzę? 11 grudnia 2018 r. nie powinieneś mieć problemu z uzyskaniem stałego miejsca zamieszkania w swoim wieku, doświadczenie pozwoli ci uzyskać dobry poziom rywalizacji, na który można zaprosić. po prostu przygotuj swój profil na początku 2017 r., aby przejść do następnej puli, ponieważ zwiększają liczbę pracowników zagranicznych, którzy mają zostać mieszkańcami na stałe przez 22 chintan parmar, mówi 11 listopada 2018 r. Jestem wykwalifikowanym pracownikiem handlowym i hanongiem w pełnym wymiarze czasu pracy jako technika kontrolna w Toronto. Czy to się liczy Główną Grupę 00 Narodowej Klasyfikacji Zawodowej. Nie mam pojęcia, co jest główną grupą oo NOC. proszę, pomóżcie mi Dzięki jimmy singh mówi 11 listopada 2018 11 listopada 2018 r. Pracuję w Toronto Ontario pod 8220Intra-company transfe8221r pozwolenie na pracę. Posiadaj ważne pozwolenie na pracę z tą samą nazwą firmy. Również w Kanadzie ponad 2,5 roku na tę samą firmę i ten sam rodzaj pozwolenia na pracę. Kiedy przyjechałem do Kanady, moja firma dostarczyła mi list do oddelegowania, który można uznać za list polecający, jaki jeszcze dowód muszę pokazać na ofertę pracy na transfer firmy Intra 14 listopada 2018 r. Mam taką samą sytuację Sanjay z jednym wyjątkiem, że mam pełnoetatowe płatne zatrudnienie u tego samego pracodawcy przez ostatnie 2,5 roku (przeniesienie wewnątrz przedsiębiorstwa) 8211 miało 6 lat doświadczenia zawodowego za granicą u tego samego pracodawcy. Byłem w trakcie ubiegania się o LMIA, ale teraz jestem trochę zdezorientowany, kiedy mówią, że mogę ubiegać się bez LMIA i nadal mogę otrzymać 8220points8221, ale nie rozumiem, ile punktów jest jednak 8220508221 z 82206008221 Jeśli LMIA nie ma Dłuższy przyznany 600 punktów wtedy myślę, że tam nie ma sensu dalej z nim postępować, twoje myśli proszę 21 listopada 2018 Not sure8230 ale możesz zamieścić swoje pytanie poniżej pod linkiem. 11 listopada 2018 r. Kanada była w dużej mierze zbudowana na ciężkiej pracy imigrantów przybywających do Kanady. Jestem w wygodnej sytuacji finansowej, ale zastanawiam się, dlaczego szukamy tak wielu osób zarządzających w Kanadzie. Czy nie mamy obywateli, którzy mogą podjąć te prace? Może muszą przenieść się do Stanów Zjednoczonych, gdzie Trump da im szansę. A obywatele USA, którzy chcieli przeprowadzić się do Kanady 8211, to ich demokratyczny system wybrał Trumpa. Może powinni spróbować wypróbować to w domu, zanim zrezygnuję z tego, że przez 5 lat sponsorowałem moją żonę jako stałego rezydenta i wkrótce jako obywatel. Jest po prostu skromną krawcową, więc podejrzewam, że zostanie na końcu linii. Wszyscy powinni być mile widziani. Jesteśmy silnym krajem ze względu na naszą różnorodność, ale zasady powinny być takie same dla wszystkich. 12 listopada 2018 r. Ukończyłem szkołę 2 lata i pracuję w Kanadzie z PGWP do lutego 2017 r. Otrzymałem LMIA i wkrótce otrzymałem ITA. Jak tylko przesłałem profil bez wizy LMIA, tylko nadesłałem list pozytywny LMIA pod koniec października 2018 r., A teraz jest on nadal przetwarzany. Myślę, że jest prawie Ale od 19 listopada. Jeśli system się zmieni, to jak to się dzieje, że nikt nie odpowiada w tej sprawie. Listopad 12, 2018 19 listopada 2018 Smutną rzeczą jest to, że międzynarodowi studenci nie mogą zdobyć ani 50, ani 200 punktów, mimo że mają wykwalifikowaną stałą pracę na pełny etat (bez LMIA) w Kanadzie. Ponieważ wszyscy pracują nad pozwoleniem na pracę na podstawie zezwolenia na pracę na otwartym zezwoleniu. Wszystko, co mogą uzyskać dzięki zaktualizowanym nowym przepisom, to 15 lub 30 dodatkowych punktów w zależności od ich wykształcenia w Kanadzie. Studenci podyplomowi ze szkół wyższych mogli uzyskać jedynie 15 punktów. Tak smutny Na przykład, jeśli otrzymali 410 punktów wcześniej, ze zaktualizowanymi zmianami otrzymają 425. Nie taka duża różnica. Steeja Thomas mówi, że 20 listopada 2018 r. mój nowy CRS Point jest taki sam jak poprzedni, czy powinienem zaktualizować mój profil o nowe obliczenia, czy mam propozycję pracy i kanadyjską edukację 20 listopada 2018 Cześć przyjaciele, nie widzę mojego ekspresu profil wejściowy jest aktualizowany o nowe dodatkowe punkty zgodnie z informacjami podanymi przez IRCC. Jestem w kategorii CEC (4 lata pracy) i posiadam ważne pozwolenie na pracę (zwolnione z LMIA i na firmowy transfer NOC-A). Zaktualizowałem swój profil wczoraj z ofertą pracy jako Tak i LMIA nie jest potrzebna. Daj mi znać, jeśli jakiś profil zostanie zaktualizowany. Czy ktoś może mi pomóc tutaj, jak zdobyć te 50 punktów. Dziękuję, Rocco Cambareri, mówi 23 listopada 2018 r. Zmierzyłem się z tym samym problemem. Mój wynik nie zmienił się po 19 listopada. Czy dostałeś jakieś wiadomości Każda pomoc byłaby bardzo doceniona. NADIR MOMIN mówi 24 listopada 2018 r. Co robić dalej Jeśli kandydaci są przekonani, że zmiany te dotyczą, IRCC informuje, że powinni: zalogować się na swoje konto online i zaktualizować swój profil Express Entry, odpowiadając na nowe pytania, które IRCC dodał do systemu. Po zaktualizowaniu profilu wynik KSR kandydatów może zostać zaktualizowany. IRCC stwierdza również, że rundy zaproszeń rozpoczną się ponownie w nadchodzących tygodniach. Da to tym, których dotyczy czas zmian, aby zaktualizować swój profil Express Entry. Wszystkie wyniki CRS zostaną zaktualizowane przed następną rundą zaproszeń. Instrukcje mówią, że jeśli kandydaci nie sądzą, że są dotknięci zmianami w systemie Express Entry, nie muszą nic robić. Znaczenie aktualizacji profilu Jeśli kandydat nie zaktualizuje swojego profilu szybko, może być zagrożony brakiem ITA w przyszłym losowaniu. Prawie połowa osób zaproszonych do złożenia dotychczasowego wniosku w 2018 r. Miała kwalifikowaną ofertę pracy. Teraz, gdy oferty pracy są nagradzane mniejszą liczbą punktów, kandydaci w puli bez oferty pracy mogą znaleźć się w lepszej pozycji do otrzymania ITA. Co więcej, nominacja na prowincję jest teraz najbardziej wartościowym czynnikiem w systemie Express Entry. Zaświadczenie o nominacji z Krajowego Programu Nominacyjnego (PNP) nadal otrzymuje 600 punktów, podobnie jak przed wprowadzeniem ostatnich zmian w systemie. Utrzymywanie zaktualizowanego profilu i pozostawanie na bieżąco z otworami PNP jest ważniejsze niż kiedykolwiek przed potencjalnymi szansami uzyskania ITA. Ważne jest, aby pamiętać, że osoby, które już otrzymały ITA, w tym ci, którzy otrzymali ITA w ostatnim losowaniu 16 listopada 2018 r., Nie podlegają zmianom, które weszły w życie 19 listopada 2018 r. Osoby te będą zobacz, czy ich wnioski zostały przetworzone zgodnie z warunkami obowiązującymi w chwili otrzymania ITA. 21 listopada 2018 Proszę, poprowadź mnie w nowej polityce, jaka jest przyszłość Międzynarodowego Studenta po dwóch latach studiów lub dyplomu. Czy jest on uprawniony do ubiegania się o PR Thx 2 grudnia 2018 r. Wszyscy zagraniczni absolwenci, którzy mają problemy z otrzymaniem dodatkowych 1530 punktów przed ogłoszeniem aktualizacji, uzyskały wynik 444. Wraz z aktualizacją mój stopień UBC daje mi dodatkowe 30 punktów, co powinno dać mi 474 punkty. Zaktualizowałem swoją sekcję dotyczącą wykształcenia o profilu Express Entry, a moje punkty pozostały 444. Stworzyłem nawet zupełnie nowy profil EE od zera, aby nadal otrzymywać 4448230 Każda z nich ma ten sam problem. Jakakolwiek rezolucja 3 grudnia 2018 r. Widziałem podobne problemy o aktualizowaniu wyników. Pomimo zmiany w dniu 19 listopada, zaktualizowałem swój dzisiejszy wynik IELTS, który powinien podnieść mój wynik o 50 punktów. Ale wynik nie jest na razie aktualizowany. Tak więc myślę, że system jest na razie nieczynny. 15 grudnia 2018 r. Zaktualizowałem swój profil, ponieważ mam ofertę pracy zwolnionej z LMIA (NAFTA) na stałą pracę, którą posiadałem już od 2 lat, więc otrzymam dodatkowe 50 punktów. Do tej pory mój wynik nie został zaktualizowany. Jest bardzo stresujący, ponieważ nie wiesz, czy to jest problem z systemem, czy też popełniłeś jakiś błąd. Prawdopodobnie otworzyłem i dwukrotnie sprawdziłem moje odpowiedzi 15 razy od 19 listopada. To był frustrujący rok. I8217m starszy inżynier ze Stanów Zjednoczonych, ale nie posiada kwalifikacji w tym systemie. 5 grudnia 2018 r. Czy ktoś może mi pomóc w uzyskaniu dodatkowych 15 punktów, które otrzymasz za naukę w Kanadzie? Nie mam na to żadnych punktów. Mam tylko 98 punktów za mój dwuletni dyplom. Sądzę, że w Kanadzie jest o 15 więcej punktów, które otrzymasz za naukę zgodnie z nowymi zasadami. Czy ktoś może mi pomóc pracować w BC przez ostatni rok i przesłałem swój profil do uzyskania PR. Mam tylko 444 punkty. Pracuję tutaj jako Przeniesienie firmy wewnętrznej, a moją firmą podstawową jest Wipro Technologies (w Indiach). Czy kwalifikuję się do 50 punktów dodatkowych, jak na pytanie poniżej, czy mogę wyrazić zgodę na to również, jeśli mogę podać tak, jakie są dokumenty Muszę się zgłosić, jeśli otrzymam ITA Czy posiadasz ważną ofertę pracy wspieraną przez ocenę wpływu na rynek pracy (w razie potrzeby) Mostafizur Rahman mówi: Obecnie mam pozwolenie na pracę po ukończeniu studiów w AB i ostatnio dostałem AINP. Zostałem zatwierdzony do przedłużenia pozwolenia na pracę w ramach kanadyjskiej umowy prowincjonalnej i terytorialnej. Miałem nadzieję, że wiem, otrzymanie pozwolenia na pracę na podstawie kanadyjskiej prowincjonalnej umowy terytorialnej ze zwolnieniem lmii t13 pozwoliłoby mi uzyskać dodatkowe punkty jako sprzeciw wobec posiadacza lmii Proszę radzić faiza kashif mówi 25 stycznia 2017 proszę pomóż mi canada point visa96311: Human Handel ludźmi i wykorzystywanie seksualne Dziś niektóre rodzaje handlu ludźmi jako forma współczesnego niewolnictwa, a często handel ludźmi, są powiązane z pracą seksualną i prostytucją, chociaż istnieją również inne formy handlu, takie jak praca przymusowa i praca domowa. Handel ludźmi może obejmować kobiety, mężczyzn i dzieci. Jego ofiary doświadczają wielu problemów psychologicznych, w tym stresu pourazowego, bezradności i depresji, z powodu fizycznego, seksualnego i psychicznego znęcania się, którego doświadczyli. Ten kurs obejmuje podstawowy przegląd handlu ludźmi. Kurs będzie starał się dostarczyć praktykom spojrzenie na rzeczywistość życia ofiar handlu ludźmi oraz na fizyczne, psychiczne, społeczne i seksualne wykorzystywanie, których doświadczają. Służą one konkretnym interwencjom i reakcjom, w tym zdrowiu psychicznemu, usługom społecznym, działaniom edukacyjnym, prewencyjnym i prawnym. Na koniec, dla praktyków, którzy pracują z ofiarami handlu ludźmi, omówiona zostanie emocjonalna tragedia, która dotknie praktyków. The course ends with an array of resources, including organizationsagencies, books, and filmsdocumentaries focusing on the issue of human trafficking. This course is designed for physicians, nurses, social workers, psychologists, therapists, mental health counselors, and other members of the interdisciplinary team who may intervene in suspected cases of human trafficking andor exploitation. Accreditations amp Approvals NetCE is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians. NetCE is accredited as a provider of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Centers Commission on Accreditation. NetCE has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 6361. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. NetCE is solely responsible for all aspects of the programs. NetCE, 1092, is approved as a provider for social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) aswb. org through the Approved Continuing Education (ACE) Program. NetCE maintains responsibility for the program. ASWB Approval Period: 03132018 to 03132019. Social workers should contact their regulatory board to determine course approval for continuing education credits. This program is approved by the National Association of Social Workers (Approval 886531582-9661) for Social Work continuing education contact hours. NetCE is accredited by the International Association for Continuing Education and Training (IACET). NetCE complies with the ANSIIACET Standard, which is recognized internationally as a standard of excellence in instructional practices. As a result of this accreditation, NetCE is authorized to issue the IACET CEU. NetCE SW CPE is recognized by the New York State Education Departments State Board for Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers 0033. This course is considered self-study, as defined by the New York State Board for Social Work. This course is approved by the Association of Social Work Boards - ASWB NJ CE Course Approval Program Provider 14 Course 299. Materials that are included in this course may include interventions and modalities that are beyond the authorized practice of licensed master social work and licensed clinical social work in New York. As a licensed professional, you are responsible for reviewing the scope of practice, including activities that are defined in law as beyond the boundaries of practice for an LMSW and LCSW. A licensee who practices beyond the authorized scope of practice could be charged with unprofessional conduct under the Education Law and Regents Rules. Social workers will receive the following type and number of credit(s): General Social Work Practice 5 for the approval period starting 04232018 and ending 04232017. Designations of Credit NetCE designates this enduring material for a maximum of 5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s). Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. NetCE designates this continuing education activity for 5 ANCC contact hour(s). NetCE designates this continuing education activity for 6 hours for Alabama nurses. NetCE designates this continuing education activity for 2 NBCC clock hour(s). Successful completion of this CME activity, which includes participation in the evaluation component, enables the participant to earn up to 5 MOC points in the American Board of Internal Medicines (ABIM) Maintenance of Certification (MOC) program. Participants will earn MOC points equivalent to the amount of CME credits claimed for the activity. It is the CME activity providers responsibility to submit participant completion information to ACCME for the purpose of granting ABIM MOC credit. Completion of this course constitutes permission to share the completion data with ACCME. Social workers participating in this intermediate to advanced course will receive 5 Clinical continuing education clock hours, in accordance with the Association of Social Work Boards. AACN Synergy CERP Category B. NetCE is authorized by IACET to offer 0.5 CEU(s) for this program. Individual State Nursing Approvals In addition to states that accept ANCC, NetCE is approved as a provider of continuing education in nursing by: Alabama, Provider ABNP0353, (valid through December 12, 2017) California, BRN Provider CEP9784 California, LVN Provider V10662 California, PT Provider V10842 Florida, Provider 50-2405 Iowa, Provider 295 Kentucky, Provider 7-0054 through 12312017. Individual State Behavioral Health Approvals In addition to states that accept ASWB, NetCE is approved as a provider of continuing education by the following state boards: Alabama State Board of Social Work Examiners, Provider 0515 Florida Board of Clinical Social Work, Marriage and Family Therapy and Mental Health Counseling, CE Broker Provider 50-2405 Illinois Division of Professional Regulation for Social Workers, License 159.001094 Illinois Division of Professional Regulation for Licensed Professional and Clinical Counselors, License 197.000185 Illinois Division of Professional Regulation for Mar riage and Family Therapists, License 168.000190 Texas State Board of Social Worker Examiners, Approval 3011 Texas State Board of Examiners of Professional Counselors, Approval 1121 Texas State Board of Examiners of Marriage and Family Therapists, Approval 425. Special Approvals This activity is designed to comply with the requirements of California Assembly Bill 1195, Cultural and Linguistic Competency. Course Objective As human trafficking becomes an increasingly more common problem in the United States, healthcare and mental health professionals will require knowledge of human trafficking patterns, the health and mental health needs of human trafficking victims, and successful interventions for victims. The purpose of this course is to increase the level of awareness and knowledge about human trafficking and exploitation so health and mental health professionals can identify and intervene in cases of exploitation. Learning Objectives Upon completion of this course, you should be able to: Define human trafficking. Identify the forms of human trafficking. Identify economic, political, social, and cultural factors that contribute to human trafficking. Describe methodological and research barriers to the study of human trafficking. Compare the different perspectives that have been used to frame the problem of human trafficking. Analyze the trafficking experience, including how traffickers recruit and the financial implications of trafficking. Explain the psychological, health, and social consequences of human trafficking. Utilize interviewing strategies to assess and identify victims and promote the ethical treatment of trafficking victims. Describe various educational, prevention, mental health, legal, and social services interventions and responses targeted to human trafficking victims. Discuss the countertransference and secondary traumatization practitioners experience when working with victims of human trafficking and the importance of self-care. Alice Yick Flanagan, PhD, MSW, received her Masters in Social Work from Columbia University, School of Social Work. She has clinical experience in mental health in correctional settings, psychiatric hospitals, and community health centers. In 1997, she received her PhD from UCLA, School of Public Policy and Social Research. Dr. Yick Flanagan completed a year-long post-doctoral fellowship at Hunter College, School of Social Work in 1999. In that year she taught the course Research Methods and Violence Against Women to Masters degree students, as well as conducting qualitative research studies on death and dying in Chinese American families. Previously acting as a faculty member at Capella University and Northcentral University, Dr. Yick Flanagan is currently a contributing faculty member at Walden University, School of Social Work, and a dissertation chair at Grand Canyon University, College of Doctoral Studies, working with Industrial Organizational Psychology doctoral students. She also serves as a consultantsubject matter expert for the New York City Board of Education and publishing companies for online curriculum development, developing practice MCAT questions in the area of psychology and sociology. Her research focus is on the area of culture and mental health in ethnic minority communities. Faculty Disclosure Contributing faculty, Alice Yick Flanagan, PhD, MSW, has disclosed no relevant financial relationship with any product manufacturer or service provider mentioned. Division Planners John M. Leonard, MD Jane C. Norman, RN, MSN, CNE, PhD 96311: Human Trafficking and Exploitation INTRODUCTION Human trafficking is not a new social problem it has always existed. In the United States, it has historically been referred to as white slavery, although it involves people of all races and ethnicities 1. Even in the last three decades, human trafficking has continued to be an issue. In the 1970s, there was an increased number of foreign-born sex workers in Europe, with a large percentage originating from Southeast Asia. By the 1980s, more women from Africa and South America were entering into the sex work trade in Europe 1. However, it was not until the 1990s that human trafficking gained global media attention, particularly as it related to women from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. One reason it is believed the public embraced this social problem at that time was because the victims were depicted as white and innocent, women whose lack of education and socioeconomic advantages made them prey to human traffickers. Portrayed in this manner, there was public sympathy and outcry to provide assistance 1. Fears of white slavery in the 19th century stemmed from anxieties about outside intrusion. Today, human trafficking, a modern-day slavery, evokes fear stemming from multiculturalism. For those in developing countries, it symbolizes the encroachment of Western values 2 . Although human trafficking has always existed, it has begun to garner increased attention as a result of awareness and outreach efforts. All social problems compete for attention, and various groups will make compelling claims about social problems using persuasive rhetoric and dramatic statistics 3. More than just a human rights issue, it has garnered attention from feminists, religious conservatives, labor activists, immigration specialists, and the mental health professions 22. Furthermore, attention will be drawn from the media, politicians, organizations, and public, all of whom will respond to the gravity of the condition. It is through this process of claims-making and counter claims-making that conditions that may not necessarily have initially attracted attention can develop into a recognized social problem 3. How the problem is described or constructed will influence public opinion, which will then ultimately facilitate action from governmental agencies, social service organizations, and international agencies 4, 5 . This course will provide a basic overview of human trafficking (e. g. the scope, definitions and frameworks, contributing factors, different forms). The course will attempt to provide practitioners a glimpse of the lives of human trafficking victims, including physical, psychological, social, and sexual abuse that human trafficking victims experience and the types of control tactics perpetrators use. Specific interventions and responses will be covered, including mental health, social services, educational, prevention, and legal efforts. Finally, for practitioners who do work with human trafficking victims, the emotional toil that it takes upon practitioners as well as the importance of self care will be discussed. The course will end by offering an array of resources. Practitioners will be encouraged to view films and documentaries about human trafficking, as this is one way to enter the lives of human trafficking victims and better understand the dynamics of the complex world of human trafficking. SCOPE OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING As the issue of human trafficking is so complex, it is difficult to determine the scope of the problem. Many scholars and researchers believe that published estimates are just educated guesses. On a global level, the United Nations has estimated that 4 million people are trafficked every year, but has since stated that this estimate may not be methodologically sound 31, 108. In 2018, nearly 6,000 cases of human trafficking were reported in the United States, though the actual number of victims is believed to be much greater 107. Overall, it is estimated that 27 million men, women, and children are being trafficked globally at any given time 27 . The estimates for the United States are equally unclear, but some approximate that 14,500 to 17,000 individuals are illegally transported to the United States every year for the purpose of exploitation 31. Weitzers content analysis of websites and publications about human trafficking found that human trafficking is portrayed as an epidemic, growing at alarming rates, with some government reports estimating 40,000 to 50,000 individuals trafficked in the United States each year 33. Weitzer argues that many of the reports have overestimated the scope of the problem and points out that the estimates fluctuate drastically year to year 29. The U. S. Department of Justice reported 161 convictions for human trafficking-related crimes in 2017, including forced labor and sex trafficking of adults and minors. This was an increase of more than 13 over the number reported in 2017 32 . DEFINITIONS OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING The United Nations defines human trafficking as 6 : The recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation or the prostitution or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs. In essence, this definition involves three elements: the transport of the person, the force or coercion of the victim, and the abuse and exploitation 47. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime divides the definition of human trafficking into three sections: the act, means, and purpose 7. The act, or what is done, generally refers to activities such as recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring, or receipt of persons. The means of trafficking consists of threats or use of force, coercion, abduction, fraud, deception, abuse of power or vulnerability, or giving payments or benefits to a person in control of the victim. Finally, these acts are carried out for the purpose of exploitation, which includes prostitution, sexual exploitation, forced labor, slavery or forced servitude, and the removal of organs 7. It is important to remember that human trafficking is not human smuggling. Human smuggling involves an individual being brought into a country through illegal means and is voluntary. The individual has provided some remuneration to another individual or party to accomplish this goal 8 . This video provides a snapshot of modern slavery, including the economics of slavery worldwide. For more information, visit Free the Slaves at freetheslaves . In many cases, women and children are considered the typical victims of human trafficking. Hart posits that women are more vulnerable to trafficking due to the lack of social safety nets in many developing countries 9. Coupled with womens subordinate social statuses in many cultures, this leads to the feminization of poverty. Although the social conditions may make women and children more vulnerable to human trafficking, the reality is that men are also victims of human trafficking. FORMS OF TRAFFICKING CHILD LABOR Child labor can be viewed as a specific form of bonded labor or forced labor. However, not all child laborers have been trafficked. Child labor is defined by International Labour Organization (ILO) as economic labor performed by a child younger than 15 years of age. Child labor is deeply rooted in poverty and the infrastructure and political stability of the country as well as market forces 18. The ILO estimates that there are 168 million child laborers in the world 48. Between 2000 and 2017 there was a nearly 33 decrease in the number of children in child labor. The reduction was greater for girls (40) than for boys (25). The largest numbers of child laborers are found in Asia and the Pacific region 48 . The definition of child labor is controversial because the definitions for work and childhood are ambiguous and often culturally defined 20. On a conceptual level, work may be beneficial for the socialization and educational processes of children 20, 56. So, it is important to differentiate between child work and child labor. Child work has been defined as activities that are supervised by an adult and that promote the development and growth of the child, while child labor does not benefit the child 18. Many definitions of child labor create a dichotomy whereby child work is considered not harmful while child labor has negative emotional, intellectual, and social consequences 21. Work that is exploitive for children has been defined as working long hours at a young age, work that is poorly compensated, and work that produces physical, social, and psychological stress that will hamper development, access to education, and self-esteem 23. The ILO adds that child labor is work that interferes, deprives, and interrupts schooling and places children in the position of trying to balance school and long work hours 56 . CHILD CONSCRIPTION In some cases of trafficking, children are kidnapped and trafficked to serve as soldiers. It is estimated that at any one time 250,000 to 300,000 children younger than 18 years of age are currently serving as child soldiers 24, 72. Traffickers prefer to recruit children to serve as soldiers because they are inexpensive and more easily molded and shaped to comply and obey without question 25. They are also more likely to kill fearlessly and recklessly. Child soldiers are treated as adults, without any regard to how the physical and psychological rigors of war will affect them psychologically and developmentally. In Uganda, where children are kidnapped or recruited as child soldiers relatively often, the Lords Resistance Army has been known to initiate new child soldiers in brutal ritualized killings of others so as to terrorize them into submission and annihilate any moral conscience they may have about killing 25 . It can be difficult to comprehend the atrocities that these children witness and experience. Bayer, Klasen, and Adam conducted a study involving 169 former Ugandan and Congolese child soldiers who were an average of 15.3 years of age 26. Almost all (92.9) reported having witnessed a shooting, 89 witnessed someone wounded, and 84 witnessed someone seriously beaten. A total of 54.4 reported having killed someone, and 27.8 reported that they were forced to engage in sexual activity 26. In another study, the researchers found that the experience of conscription among children produced significant emotional and psychological traumas and a host of cognitive and behavioral problems 27. In this study of 19 child soldiers, 18 had volunteered to join the army and one had been abducted. Although most of the children volunteered into the army, their participation became involuntary. Some tried to run away or disobey, which resulted in beatings and imprisonment. If captured, they were told to commit suicide 27. The reintegration of child soldiers is not easy. Many are stigmatized when they return to their home villages, as their families and friends fear that these former child soldiers may be violent 72. Girls as young as 9 years of age may be abducted or given to serve as soldiers, sex slaves, cooks, andor wives for soldiers an estimated 40 of child soldiers are girls 19. These children are also stigmatized, perhaps even more so given the cultural value placed on female virginity before marriage. These young girls may have committed acts of violence, experienced sexual abuse, andor been pregnant 74. As a result, they are often rejected by their families if they return home 72 . Listen to a National Public Radio interview with Ishmael Beah, a former child soldier, at npr. orgtemplatesstorystory. phpstoryId7519542 . HUMAN RIGHTS PERSPECTIVE The human rights perspective focuses on the link of human trafficking to historical forms of slavery and the denial of human rights and dignity. Human rights are often considered the natural and universal rights or laws for human beings 81. However, the issue is not this simpleit is important to consider what these universal conditions are and to what extent Eurocentrism is instilled in the work of human rights activists 81 . As with slavery in the 18th and 19th centuries, trafficking victims today have no choice over their abusive and exploitive conditions. Unlike the older forms of slavery, this modern form is an outcome of globalization 28. The human rights perspective also argues that, to some extent, the general public indirectly contributes to the problem of human trafficking as consumers in the global market 28. In a study of how human trafficking is socially constructed, the videos being examined portrayed general consumers and corporations as perpetrators of human trafficking in addition to pimps, crime organizations, and middlemen recruiters 40 . LABOR RIGHTS PERSPECTIVE The labor rights perspective is concerned with the rights of illegal migrant workers in the United States. This perspective incorporates elements of the human rights, feminist, and migrationlabor perspectives however, the difference is that this perspective encompasses all forms of labor and frames sex work as an economic activity 34. For example, some women engage in sex work intermittently to supplement their income while others rely on sex work for their main or sole income 86. Advocates in this camp fight for laws and policies that create rights to protect migrant workers and lift the legal restrictions on illegal immigration 34 . These wide-ranging perspectives help to frame the problem and influence public response. When human trafficking is framed as an illegal immigration activity, the public response is generally unsympathetic 1. When human trafficking is viewed as a cultural remnant of patriarchy and inherent to the institutional landscape and when victims are portrayed as young women and girls, the public may be more sympathetic to their plight. It is important to remember that each perspective will also highlight the different victims involved. For the most part, the media does not portray trafficked victims to include agricultural workers, domestic workers, or factory workers 47 . THE TRAFFICKING EXPERIENCE Five stages of the trafficking experience have been identified 41, 87 : Pre-departure stage: The period before the victim becomes involved in the trafficking situation. This may include recruitment and preparing for travel. Travel and transit stage: The time after recruitment during which the victim agrees or is coerced into the trafficked situation. This phase also includes the journey whereby the trafficker(s) brings the victim(s) to their work destination. It is important to remember that this stage can be very dangerous and can involve numerous transit points. Destination stage: This is the period during which the victim arrives at the intended destination. This stage is marked by exploitation, abuse, victimization, and coercion. One way to control the victims is to continually inflate their debt so they have to constantly work to pay it off. Detention, deportation, and criminal evidence stage: If a victim is arrested by the police or immigration authorities, victims are held in legal proceedings and they often fear deportation, andor retaliation from the trafficker(s). Integration and re-integration stage: During this stage, government and nongovernment agencies provide services to victims that involve a long process of attempting to reintegrate the victim back into hisher community. TRAFFICKERS: AN OVERVIEW Much attention has been focusing on victims of trafficking however, it is important to also understand the perpetrators. Methods of Recruitment It has been suggested human traffickers employ five general strategies to recruit and traffic victims 42, 88 : Kidnapping: Traffickers may kidnap their victims. They may lure them with food or treats or take them by force. Victims with few if any social ties are highly vulnerable, as no one will miss them or report their disappearance. Targeting poor families: Traffickers may convince families to sell their children (often daughters). Because many families in developing countries live in abject poverty, traffickers will stress to victims families how the money will help them to survive. Other traffickers may tell families that selling their daughter will provide her with more promising opportunities. Fake storefronts: Some employment, modeling, or marriage agencies are fronts for illegal trafficking operations. A potential victim might be lured with the promise of employment, a lucrative modeling contract, or an arranged marriage in the United States. After victims have been lured in, traffickers come to assess their product. Legal storefronts: Some legal businesses in the tourism, entertainment, and leisure industries integrate trafficking activities into their business structure. Recruiting local prostitutes: Traffickers might purchase prostitutes working in local night clubs from brothel owners or simply lure prostitutes by promising them a more affluent future. In some cases, the perpetrators are family members, friends, or acquaintances of the victims and families. In a study focused on child trafficking in Albania, interview participants indicated that some trafficking recruiters were individuals known to the families 43. They would tell stories of better opportunities, such as jobs andor education for the child and the ability of the child to send money back to their family, in order to recruit new victims. Recruiters or pimps are often women who had been lured into the sex industry themselves. One study found that 60 of the perpetrators were female who reported that they felt the only way to survive and even possibly escape was to lure other young women 89. This is a particularly common practice in Thailand 87 . The Financial Profits Unfortunately, human trafficking can be a lucrative business. According to the ILO, profits from forced labor, trafficking, and modern slavery are estimated to be 150 billion annually 90. The majority of this total is attributable to commercial sexual exploitation (99 billion) followed by constructionmanufacturingmining (34 billion), agriculture (9 billion), and domestic work (8 billion) 90 . The receiving country and location of trafficking will affect the profits. For example, if a girl is kidnapped from a village in Nepal and taken to India, she can be sold in India for 1,000 42. If she is then trafficked to the United States, she could be sold for 20,000. Interestingly, the cost of a slave has not risen over time. According to Bales, the cost of obtaining a slave to work in the agriculture sector in 2007 was about 100 in 1850, this same slave would cost the equivalent of 40,000 in 2007 currency 44 . CONSEQUENCES OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING: IMPACT ON VICTIMS The social realities of victims of human trafficking are difficult to comprehend, and some may wonder why victims remained silent and complied with their traffickers. The Silence Compliance Model was created to explore the factors that promote victims seeming willingness to comply to their traffickers demands 91. This model has three categories: coercion, collusion, and contrition. Victims are coerced, brutalized, and threatened, and basic necessities of life are withheld from them. This serves to silence victims and create a sense of helplessness. Victims are then forced to collude with the traffickers as a result of their relative isolation, fear, false sense of belonging, and complete dependence on the trafficker. Finally, victims feel contrite, ashamed, stigmatized, and remorseful of the things they have been made to do 91 . PSYCHOLOGICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH CONSEQUENCES Victims of trafficking experience a host of psychological, mental health, and emotional distress. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is common given the trauma many victims experience, including physical andor sexual violence and abuse victims forced into prostitution experience continual, daily sexual assault 49. In a study of 192 European women who were trafficked but who managed to escape, the overwhelming majority (95) disclosed that they experienced physical and sexual violence during the time of their trafficked experience 50. More than 90 reported sexual abuse, and 76 reported physical abuse. Trafficked victims experience fear from the start of their capture through the transit phase and after they arrive at their destination. During the transit stage, many victims experience dangerous border crossings, risky types of transports, injury, beatings, and sexual assault 41. Upon arrival to their destination, many trafficking victims have been socially isolated, held in confinement, and deprived of food. All sense of security is stripped from themtheir personal possessions, identity papers, passports, visas, and other documents 41. The continual fear for their personal safety and their families safety and the perpetual threats of deportation ultimately breed a sense of loss of control and learned helplessness. It is not surprising that depression, anxiety, and PTSD are common symptoms experienced by trafficked victims. In a study of 164 survivors of human trafficking who returned to Nepal, the authors examined the extent to which they experienced PTSD, depression, and anxiety 51. All of the survivors experienced some level of these disorders, but the survivors who were trafficked for sex experienced higher levels of depression and PTSD compared to those who were not trafficked for sex. In a study with Moldovan survivors of human trafficking, researchers found that six months after their return, 54 had diagnosable mental health issue. Specifically, 35.8 met the diagnostic criteria for PTSD, 12.5 met the criteria for major depression, and 5.8 were diagnosed with an anxiety disorder 92 . There is also some evidence that trafficked victims may experience complex PTSD, a type of PTSD that involves an acute change of the victims sense of self, their relationship with others, and their relationship with God or higher being 93. These persons direct anger inwardly (toward themselves) in addition to toward their perpetrators, which results in a loss of faith in themselves and the world 93 . Substance abuse is also common among victims. In interviews, trafficked women discussed how traffickers forced them to use substances like drugs andor alcohol so they could work longer hours, take on more clients, andor perform sexual acts that they could not normally 41. Other victims used substances as a means to cope with their situations. Children forced into labor experience grueling hours and are frequently beaten by their owners. According to Clawson and Goldblatt, underage victims of domestic sex trafficking fluctuate through a range of emotions from despair, shame, guilt, hopelessness, anxiety, and fear 52. Depending upon the level of trauma, some engage in self-destructive behaviors like self-mutilation or suicide attempts. For some, their ambivalence toward the perpetrators may be confusing. On the one hand, they want to escape the abuse, yet simultaneously, they may have a sort of traumatic bond with the perpetrators 52 . Children forced into conscription will also experience a host of psychological symptoms. In a study comparing former Nepalese child soldiers and children who were never conscripted, former child soldiers experienced higher levels of depression, anxiety, PTSD, psychological difficulties, and functional impairments 53. In another study of former children soldiers from the Congo and Uganda, one-third met the criteria for PTSD 26. The researchers found there was a relationship between greater levels of PTSD symptoms and higher levels of feelings of revenge and lower levels of openness to reconciliation 26. In-depth narrative interviews of former child soldiers from northern Uganda found that the children spoke of the violence and atrocities they witnessed without any emotion, as if they had removed themselves from their experiences 94. This speaks to how the victims have to numb themselves psychologically in order to cope. The researchers also found that the children who lost their mothers were more traumatized by this experience than the violence they witnessed as soldiers. Some have argued that the diagnostic criteria of PTSD may not be easily applied to those from different cultures. As a result, it is important to assess for other psychiatric disorders, such as depression. Japan, for example, never used the PTSD diagnosis prior to 1995, despite the fact that they have a large and intricate mental health system 54. Ultimately, PTSD cannot be universally applied to every culture and for every humanitarian crisis therefore, if a human trafficking victim does not necessarily fall within the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders criteria for PTSD, one cannot necessarily conclude that they have not experienced trauma or are not traumatized 54 . SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES When rescued and attempting to reintegrate into their communities, victims of human trafficking often experience stigma, ostracism, and marginalization 53. For example, in Nepal, community members perceived returning child soldiers who had performed acts such as carrying dead bodies or coed sleeping as in violation of Hindu cultural norms 53. One documentary following former child soldiers living in a refugee camp in northern Uganda found that preconceived notions and myths about children soldiers often led to ridicule and ostracism after they were liberated from the army and returned home. However, girls who were recruited as soldiers, who were forced to have sex, or who return with children appear to be the most marginalized group 55. In a qualitative study of former girl soldiers in Sierra Leone, researchers found that, compared to returning boy soldiers, girls were perceived to have violated gender norms and values about sexuality. Although psychologically and developmentally they were still children, the community perceived and treated them as damaged or unclean women. Their communities were not able to integrate them back in despite the victimization they experienced. These girls lacked voice and experienced shame, marginalization, poverty, and powerlessness upon their return 55 . HEALTH CONSEQUENCES In one study of trafficked women, headaches, fatigue, dizziness, back pain, pelvic pain, stomach pain, and gynecological infections were common, generally the result of continual physical, psychological, and sexual abuse 50. It is important to remember that some of these somatic complaints, such as headaches, fatigue, and gastrointestinal problems, may be underlying symptoms of anxiety, depression, and stress 50. Some cultural groups might not use the terms depression, sad, or anxious, but may use metaphors and somatic symptoms to describe their pain, all of which are embedded within cultural ideologies. The most common culture-based idioms of distress are somatic symptoms. Some groups tend not to psychologize emotional problems instead, they experience psychological conflicts as bodily sensations (e. g. headaches, bodily aches, gastrointestinal problems, and dizziness). Using an in-depth, direct interview survey designed to explore each stage of the trafficking experience, a multi-country European study identified a range of aversive health, sexual, and reproductive consequences common among women and adolescent victims of human trafficking 41 : Pre-departure stage: All victims reported having had limited knowledge of the health implications of having sex with strangers, and only 1 in 25 felt well-informed regarding the risks of acquiring HIV or other sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Travel and transit stage: Half of those interviewed reported having been confined, beaten, andor raped during the journey. Destination stage: A large majority reported having been intentionally hurt (as evidenced by contusions, lacerations, loss of consciousness, and signs of head trauma) subjected to solitary confinement and deprived of human contact and adequate food and nutrition subject to a variety of physical ailments, including headache, fever, undiagnosed pelvic pain, urinary tract infection, STIs, rashscabies, and oraldental health issues. All had experienced repeated sexual abuse or coercion, and 1 in 4 reported at least one unintended pregnancy (often involving negative outcomes of abortions performed in unsafe and unhealthy conditions). The British Association for Sexual Health and HIV has identified trafficked womencommercial sex workers as a group vulnerable to sexual violence. Inquiries about such vulnerabilities will help to identify those in need of additional support and help to facilitate appropriate referrals to mental health services, general practitioners, and support agencies. Access to interpreter and advocacy services may be helpful. Level of Evidence: Expert OpinionConsensus Statement In the context of forced prostitution among trafficked victims, safeguards against infection (e. g. regular condom use), early diagnosis, and adequate antimicrobial treatment are inconsistently employed or absent entirely 41. Consequently, in addition to unwanted pregnancy, the risk for pelvic inflammatory disease and subsequent infertility is relatively high. Moreover, the relationship between forced prostitution and HIV infection is stronger when sexual violence is involved. Women who are forced into prostitution are 11 times more likely to become HIV-infected than women who entered prostitution voluntarily 95. Sexual violence may increase the transmission risk as a result of open abrasions and injuries to the vagina. Furthermore, sexual violence can negatively impact self-esteem, which could then deter victims from advocating more strongly for condom use 95 . Among child victims of human trafficking, healthy growth and development is especially problematic. Malnourishment and poor hygiene often lead to delayed bone growth, poorly formed teeth, and early dental caries 59. The intense nature of child labor also has severe negative physical and health consequences. Children working in unsafe conditions without protection, such as in mines or mills, can lead to respiratory problems such as asthma and bronchitis 57. A study of adult and child laborers on tobacco farms in Kazakhstan found that the workers were unaware that exposure to tobacco and pesticides could affect their health. Protective garments were also rare, which many children not even having gloves 96 . Under normal circumstances, young children are still developing physically however, such adverse conditions can halt their development. The lungs of adolescent boys typically experience the most rapid growth around 13 to 17 years of age working in conditions characterized by excessive toxic dust or unclean air makes them more vulnerable to developing silicosis and fibrosis 57. In the United States, young children participating in agricultural work are at risk of the major traumas associated with farm work, such as injuries caused by tractors or falling from heights, in addition to those injuries associated with repetitive stress and exposure to toxins. Children have thinner layers of epidermis, which make them more vulnerable to the toxicity of pesticides, and this can ultimately increase their risks for certain cancers 57. Children working in gold mines do intensive digging, lifting, and transporting and mix mercury with the crushed ore, often with their bare hands. Mercury toxicity can lead to neurological symptoms such as loss of vision, tremors, and memory loss 96 . IDENTIFICATION AND ASSESSMENT Healthcare providers are often the most likely to encounter a victim of human trafficking under circumstances that provide an opportunity to intervene. Because human trafficking and exploitation are, by nature, covert processes, the identification and rescue of the victim can be difficult. Traffickers move victims from one area to another to reduce the risk of identification, and one of the main problems with the assessment of such individuals is that practitioners may only have a one-time encounter with the victim 98. Bruises, scars, and other signs of physical abuse may be missed on examination, as victims are often beaten in areas hidden by clothing (e. g. the lower back) so as not to affect the victims outer appearance. In a survey of 110 emergency department physicians, nurses, and physician assistants, the majority (76) reported having a knowledge of human trafficking, but only 13 felt equipped to identify a trafficking victim and only 22 were confident in their ability to provide satisfactory care for such patients 106. Less than 3 had ever received any training on this topic. In a separate survey of healthcare and social service providers, only 37 had ever received training on identification of trafficking victims 109. With regard to episodic clinical encounters, recommendations for providing safe assessments in a culturally sensitive manner are lacking. The Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Children and Families maintains a useful website that addresses practical issues of human trafficking for allied professional groups, known as the Rescue and Restore Campaign 59. Included are diagnostic and interviewing tips to help healthcare providers recognize, intervene, and refer trafficking victims. Emergency and primary care providers should be cognizant of clues that a patient may be the victim of trafficking and prepared to engage in greater depth of inquiry with special attention to the following indicators 59, 65, 97. Does someone, other than family, who behaves in a controlling manner, accompany the patient Traffickers attempt to guard and control most every aspect of the victims life, while maintaining isolation from family, friends, and other common forms of human interaction. Does the patient speak English If not, has he or she recently been brought to this country, and from where Many victims of human trafficking have recently been trafficked from other countries. As discussed, common sending countriesregions include Eastern Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa, India, and Russia. If the patient is accompanied by someone other than a family member, who does the talking, and why Attempt to interview and examine the patient separately and alone, using an interpreter if necessary. Probe in a sensitive manner for detailed information on the situation and relationship. Does the patient show signs of psychosocial stress (e. g. appears withdrawn, submissive, fearful, anxious, depressed) Can the individual account for this Are there visible signs of physical abuse (e. g. bruises, lacerations, scars) How does the individual explain these Does the patient lack a passport or other immigration and identification documentation (e. g. drivers license, social security number, visa) If so, what explanation is given To control victims movements, traffickers often take away passports and any legal identification documents. What is the patients home and work situation Basic questions about what they eat, where they live and sleep, who else lives with them, and what work they do can be revealing. For example, Can you leave your work or job situation if you wish or When you are not working, can you come and go as you please Is the explanation given for the clinical visit consistent with the patients presentation and clinical findings If answers to these questions indicate that an individual may be a victim of human trafficking, one should contact the National Human Trafficking Resource Center at 1-888-373-7888. Under the child abuse laws, practitioners who are mandated reporters and who are suspicious that a minor is being abused should immediately report the abuse. For more information regarding specific states reporting requirements, please visit childwelfare. govtopicssystemwidelaws-policiesstate . INTERVIEWING TRAFFICKED VICTIMS: BEST PRACTICE GUIDELINES According to the World Health Organization, a minimum condition for healthcare providers to ask women about violence is that it is safe to do so (i. e. the perpetrator is not present) they must be trained on the correct way to ask and on how to respond to women who disclose violence. Level of Evidence: Expert OpinionConsensus Statement Service providers should repeatedly weigh the risks and benefits of various actions when interviewing human trafficking victims 88, 99, 100. The following interviewing recommendations were published by the World Health Organization to encourage service providers to continually and ethically promote human trafficking victims safety during every phase of the interviewing process 66. Each victim and trafficking situation should be treated as unique there are no standard templates of experiences. Listen carefully to the victims story. Each story told is unique, and each patient will voice distinctive concerns. Believe each story, no matter how incredible it may seem. As rapport and trust build (perhaps very slowly), accounts may become more extensive. Always be safe and assume the victim is at risk of physical, psychological, social, and legal harm. Evaluate the risks and benefits of interviewing before starting the interviewing process. The interviewing process should not invoke more distress. In other words, the interviewing process should not end up re-traumatizing the victim. Provide referrals for services where necessary however, it is necessary to be realistic and not make promises that cannot be kept. Trust is vital because it has been severed on so many levels for trafficking victims. Victims readiness to change will not be based on what societal defines as ready or social expectations. Some victims will eagerly grasp new opportunities, while others may be fearful of potential traffickers threat and be less receptive to help. Determine the need for interpreters and if other service providers should be present during the interviewing phase. Ensure that everyone involved is adequately prepared in their knowledge about human trafficking, how perpetrators control their victims, and how to ask questions in a culturally sensitive manner. Keep in mind that often times, traffickers will offer to help with the interpreting. All involved should be prepared for an emergency plan. For example, is there a set plan for a victim who indicates heshe is suicidal or in danger of being hurt Always be sure to obtain informed consent. Remember the informed consent process is going to be unfamiliar to many victims. In addition, self-determination and autonomy have been compromised by continual threatens and being forced to commit dehumanizing acts. Avoid using legal and technical jargon. Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act In May 2018, the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act (JVTA) became law, allowing survivors formal input in federal anti-trafficking policy and providing incentives for states to enact laws to prevent the prosecution of child victims for crimes committed as a direct result of being subjected to trafficking. The JVTA provides additional bases of criminal liability for those who patronize or solicit trafficking victims for commercial sex and creates a new offense prohibiting the advertising of sex trafficking activity. It also clarifies that traffickers in child sex trafficking cases who had a reasonable opportunity to observe the victim can no longer claim ignorance about a victims age as a defense 27 . Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act A wide range of laws have been established to protect human trafficking victims and to prosecute perpetrators. A general knowledge of these laws is helpful when caring for victims and seeking appropriate social services. The VTVPA was enacted in 2000 and reauthorized in 2003, 2005, 2008, and 2017 by the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Acts 27. It emphasizes the three Ps: prevention, protection, and prosecution 102. The prevention component consists of training and awareness the protection dimension gives trafficked victims the ability to receive services using federal funds like other refugees and the prosecution component focuses on laws and policies for the prosecution of traffickers. Because victims of trafficking are often viewed as criminals, this law states that victims of severe trafficking should not be penalized for any illegal behaviors or acts they engaged in as a result of being trafficked, including entering the United States with false documents or no documentation or working without appropriate paperwork 42. This law also allows T Nonimmigrant Status (T visas) to be granted to victims of trafficking so they may remain in the United States with the purpose of collaborating with the federal authorities to prosecute the perpetrators. During this time, victims are offered a range of benefits and services, including access to the Witness Protection Program 42. After three years, victims can apply for permanent resident status 8 . One of the criticisms of the Act is that it places the burden of demonstrating innocence and coercion on the victim 34. The Act also fails to recognize the complex dynamics of human trafficking. Many victims have been abused and terrorized by the perpetrators, who they must now provide information and evidence against to stay in the country. Victims are continually fearful that they will be deported 34 . Victims who are of minor age are eligible for Unaccompanied Refugee Minors programs, the Childrens Health Insurance program, and Temporary Assistance to Needy Families 58. Furthermore, victims between 16 and 24 years of age are eligible for work permits and can apply for the Job Corps program 58. However, it is important to remember that the key to this law is that the victim must have experienced a severe form of trafficking and the victim must be willing to assist in the apprehension and prosecution of the perpetrator to receive services 31 . Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act was introduced and signed into law in 2017. It allocated 5 million in 2009, 7 million in 2017, 7 million in 2017, and 8 million annually through 2017 to provide services to victims and to prevent human trafficking 12, 64, 110. It amends the VTVPA and assists foreign governments to implement programs to prevent human trafficking. Victims of human trafficking in other countries are also eligible for assistance through organizations that have grants from the U. S. government 64. Greater monitoring of trafficking trends through databases will also be implemented. The Act also declares that it is not a defense that a defendant is not criminally liable or is subject to reduced criminal liability due to acceptance of the illicit conduct in the foreign jurisdiction. The Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to End the Exploitation of Children Today Act The Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to End the Exploitation of Children Today Act was enacted in 2003. This law maintains that all sexual activity with minors, within or outside the United States, is illegal. American citizens who engage in sex with minors in any country and who are caught will be prosecuted in the United States 42 . As of 2017, all 50 states have enacted criminal anti-trafficking laws. In addition, very state has a law on labor trafficking, and all but two states have passed criminal statutes for sex trafficking 103 . COUNTERTRANSFERENCE, SECONDARY TRAUMATIZATION, AND SELF CARE INTERNATIONAL AND POLITICAL COUNTERTRANSFERENCE International and political countertransference can occur when practitioners work with patients from other countries and cultural groups 67. This is manifested on several levels. First, practitioners may assume that what works in the United States can be applied to immigrants and refugees. This enthnocentric view presupposes that Western paradigms about healing and well-being are universal to all cultures. Second, the Western construct of the healthcare or social service provider as an expert may promote unequal power relationships 67. These attitudes can be quickly picked up by victims of human trafficking, which can negatively impact the rapport and trust building phases of the therapeutic relationship. The most prevalent assumption is that because the victim has been abused and has undergone dehumanizing treatment, he or she will want to leave. Yet, trafficked victims have been known to miss their traffickers, have ambivalent feelings about leaving their situation, or feel that sex work is the only viable option for them 99. This can be difficult for practitioners to accept. Practitioners may be, consciously or unconsciously, affected by media depictions of particular cultural groups and the social problem of human trafficking 67. Media portrayals can mold social norms and beliefs, which can then translate into ethnocentric, imperialist, or negative reactions and responses toward the victim. For example, human sex trafficking and prostitution are often linked by the media, and the practitioners beliefs about prostitution can affect his or her relationship with the victim. A common instinctive reaction to prostitution is to remove the individual from the situation, with force if necessary 67. Similarly, the media often shows young female human trafficking victims being collected by police officers. This may cause practitioners to believe on some level that victims of human trafficking are criminals. In many cases, the media perpetuates racialized and colonizing views of women of color who are victims of sex trafficking 34. The colonizing depictions reinforce the myth that women from developing countries are helpless and powerless, deserving of our protection and worthy of being saved 34. To what extent have these messages been internalized and how might these messages ultimately affect practitioners attitudes and beliefs systems about human trafficking victims SECONDARY TRAUMATIZATION The terms secondary traumatization, secondary traumatic stress, secondary victimization, vicarious traumatization, and compassion fatigue refer to the psychological impact of being in close contact with those who are directly affected by trauma and helping or wanting to help the victim. Figley has defined secondary traumatic stress as, the natural, consequent behaviors and emotions resulting from knowledge about a traumatizing event experienced by a significant other 68. Vicarious traumatization consists of a transformation of the inner experience of the therapist that comes about as a result of empathic engagement with patients trauma material 69. Vicarious traumatization can include emotional and cognitive arousal symptoms such as increased emotional sensitivity, lack of well-being, intrusive thoughts, and difficulty concentrating 70 . Secondary trauma can affect practitioners beliefs about the world, others, and self 71. For example, humans have beliefs about safety, trust, sense of control, intimacy, and sense of esteem and competence 71. But trauma, even indirect trauma, can disturb these beliefs. Trauma that is caused by another human (e. g. abuse) may be more difficult for practitioners to cope with because it is related to the issue of human evilness. Human trafficking certainly raises questions about how one human can inflict such terror upon another. Ultimately, this profoundly affects existing beliefs, more so than trauma caused by natural events (e. g. natural disasters) 71 . PRACTITIONER SELF CARE In a study of clinicians who work with sexual abuse survivors, clinicians were asked what parts of their work were enjoyable. They indicated that they enjoyed being part of the journey and process of patients growing, healing, and changing. Witnessing patients resilience and strength also spurs clinicians own personal growth. However, one cannot ignore that when practitioners who work with victims of trauma, including human trafficking, they enter the world of victimization, horror, and abuse through their patients detailed and graphic stories. As a result of building a rapport and relationship with their patients, practitioners share their emotional burden. This can affect clinicians socially, psychologically, spiritually, andor interpersonally. Self care is integral to the prevention of negative symptoms such as burnout, secondary traumatization, and compassion fatigue. Practitioners education, training, and licenses do not necessarily provide effective shields to these types of stressors 73. To some extent, practitioners might be more vulnerable to neglecting self care because rigorous academic studies and early professional training may have overlooked this aspect of professional life 73 . Self care can consist of an array activities that touch on the following domains: physical (e. g. exercise, nutrition, sleep), recreational (e. g. play activities, vacation time, hobbies), social support (e. g. interaction with friends, family members), and spiritualreligious (e. g. prayer, meditation) 70. Self-care activities exist along a continuum, with proactive planning and reactive intervention on either end 70. Practitioners should determine where along this continuum they will implement self-care activities. To be most effective, self care should be viewed as proactive rather than reactive when a specific stressor occurs. Practitioners should spend some time asking themselves about the specific behaviors they are currently engaging 70. For example, what type of exercise regimen is the practitioner currently engaged in How frequently How often does the practitioner interact with friends (with whom specifically) 70. A self-care plan might also include cognitive and stress management techniques, such as biofeedback, hypnosis, and other cognitive strategies. A self-care plan could also actively incorporate rest into day-to-day practice. Committing time daily to a meditation or deep breathing practice can be beneficial 104 . Practitioners are often told to leave their work at work, but this is often not as simple as it sounds. A ritual may be needed to make a concrete transition from work to home, such as walking in silence around the block for 5 minutes before getting into the car to drive home 104 . The monitoring of self care is as important as establishing a plan. Self-care check-ins can be established, whereby practitioners are assigned to peers so they can hold each other accountable to their self-care plans 75. Or if a practitioner is comfortable, a supervisor can incorporate this monitoring into hisher regular supervision. When providing education and interventions to practitioners about self care and secondary traumatization, a message of blaming the victim (practitioner) can inadvertently be conveyed 76. Practitioners may feel that they are perceived as weak because they are encouraged to take care of themselves. Along the same lines, organizations should determine if their culture and climate may implicitly convey a message that hinders practitioners from engaging in self-care activities. For example, is taking vacation time implicitly associated with a lack of commitment or dedication If practitioners do not work overtime, do they feel they will be perceived as less motivated than their colleagues who are working overtime 77. Is there space in the work environment for practitioners to relax Ensuring that there is a designated space for practitioners to take breaks after emotionally difficult meetings with patients and their families can encourage self-care behaviors 77 . POST-TRAUMATIC GROWTH Victims of tremendous trauma may experience PTSD and a range of negative consequences socially, emotionally, and relationally. However, post-traumatic growth can also occur. Post-traumatic growth refers to a set of positive changes that develop in response to trauma 105. Some will grow relationally, with enhanced relationships with others and a greater sense of compassion for others. Some will grow in terms of seeing themselves in a new way and developing a stronger sense of identity. Others will acquire a new personal life philosophy of life and greater appreciation for life 105. Practitioners witnessing post-traumatic growth may also experience a positive impact in their professional and personal lives. CONCLUSION Human trafficking is a severe human rights violation. Because the roots of human trafficking are multifaceted, no one solution exists to eliminate this problem. Unfortunately, as the problem grows, practitioners will be confronted with the issue in their patient populations. Practitioners should be committed to the collaboration amongst disciplines to address poverty, racism, discrimination, and oppression in order to reduce the vulnerable positions of human trafficking victims and their families. Because of the social justice component in the codes of ethics of professionals such as physicians, nurses, social workers, psychologists, and counselors, all practitioners can play a key role in the individual, community, and systemic levels to help address this gross abuse of power. One way to begin is to educate oneself and ones respective disciplines about the global nature of human trafficking and the complex dynamics of the problem. This video is California Attorney General Kamala Harriss keynote address at Examining the Roots of Human Trafficking and Exploitation, the 20172018 UCLA School of Law Symposium. This recording from the January 2018 University of California Los Angeles Law Review Symposium is provided with permission from the University of California Los Angeles, School of Law.
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