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ILO Factsheet Measuring the costs of coercion
Jul 01 2010
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What are, in addition to the human suffering, the financial costs of coercion to people who work in forced labour? In other words, how much money is "stolen" from people in forced labour? Answering this question requires some estimate of the net opportunity cost of being in forced labour, i.e. the amount of income that is lost because a person is in forced labour instead of being free. In a general sense, the cost of coercion can be defined as the difference between a victim's actual income in forced labour and what he or she would have earned doing the same job in a free labour relationship. Research over the last few years has shown that the loss of income associated with coercion can be traced to two main sources. The first source is the underpayment of wages. The second source of lost income that we consider arises mainly in cases of human trafficking: it is the financial costs associated with the recruitment process. More information about human trafficking on the website of ILO.
Report of the Special Rapporteur on trafficking in persons, especially women and children, Joy Ngozi Ezeilo
La Strada: Findings and Results of the European Action for Compensation for Trafficked Persons
The Protection Project: 100 Best Practices in Combating Trafficking in Persons
ILO Special Action Programme to combat forced labour January 2013 Newsletter
Travail non protégé, exploitation invisible: la traite à des fins de servitude domestique
Ewa'a: Annual Book 2011 (English)
Ewa'a: Annual Book 2011 (Arabic)
La Strada Guidance on representing trafficked persons in compensation claims
UNODC Issue Paper: Abuse of a Position of Vulnerability and other "Means" Within the Definition of Trafficking in Persons (2012)- IOM Understanding and Counteracting Trafficking
- UNODC_Strategy on Human Trafficking and Migrant Smuggling - 2012
- CSO_Annual Report 2009 - 2010




