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Justice Without Humanity Is Empty: The Missing Link in the Global Fight Against Trafficking -Fransiscus Nanga Roka, Yovita Arie Mangesti

To bridge these gaps requires states to adopt a trauma-informed approach in their criminal justice systems, make available survivor-oriented services regardless of alignment with prosecuting objectives, hold corporations to account with genuine penalties for breaches of company obligations and incorporate the voices and experience of survivors into any reform plan. Only then will it be possible for the promise of the Palermo Protocol to become reality no longer merely judged by numbers of convictions, but as a testimonial proof that human dignity has been restored.

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Human rights groups are concerned about further arrests amid continuing raids in the occupied West Bank [File: Jaafar Ashtiyeh/AFP]

The way of expresses discomfort, the world today already than well funded. From the adoption of the 38th Rule in Domestic Law on the United Domestic Relations Convention and the annual Department of State TIP Reports, states measure success rather unimaginatively in numbers arrested, prosecuted, convicted. But under these figures hides an ugly truth: justice without mercy renders its name hateful and difficult to apply. A system of counting convictions, but treating survivors as noisome gateways-in-waiting, risks reproduce the very harm it purports to stop.

Human trafficking is not just filthy crime of course. The UN Office on Drugs and Crime consistently documents patterns of sexual exploitation, forced labor, organ removal and trafficking across continents save as in Antarctica However, the international response remains primarily punishment. Governments tighten border controls, expand surveillance and live from praised for sensational trials against traffickers. While accountability is important, over-reliance on punishment as the only model for justice leaves survivors ‘ real life experiences, trauma, stigma, displacement and economic vulnerability forgotten.

The fundamental error lies in the overcriminalization paradigm. Trafficking frameworks are primarily aimed at breaking up criminal networks, but often do this at the cost of ignoring structural conditions such as poverty, gender inequality, exploitative labor markets, and precarious migratory patterns, which are, however, key factors attracting many women into prostitution. Victims are often regarded as instruments of prosecution rather than people with rights. In many jurisdictions, cooperation with law enforcement becomes a sort of unspoken condition attached to either access to protection or rights left residents. Justice becomes transactional: tell the truth, and you will be saved.

This approach is at odds with the human rights architecture enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and further strengthened by the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. These instruments affirm dignity, autonomy and equality not an interest-based consensus. In practice, however, survivors may be detained for immigration violations, criminalized for activities performed under duress, or subjected to extradition procedures that only re-traumatize them.

In a human centred model it is necessary we change from looking at shaming victims first as truth setters for a reproduction first mindset Let me be clear. That does not mean we should give up on criminal responsibility. Instead, it insists on the conjunction of justice and protection, empowerment, reform. This includes laws providing non-prosecution clauses for survivors compelled to commit crimes, free access to medical and psychological care, living and working environments free of abuse, long-term reintegration into society that leaves behind issues of race all judges must generally do their best to be open minded about cases no matter where they might stand on any issue before them at that time whether or not a person is victim needs some consideration carefully pressed for.

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We must also face difficult economic realities: Corporations profit from the tangle of global supply chains that contains large amounts exploitative labor especially agriculture, construction, domestic services, and fishery work. Their subcontracting opacity or weak control by governments makes them difficult to regulate. While a few states have passed laws requiring corporations to check their suppliers, the enforcement is uneven at best. Lack of corporate responsibility creates a dual-track system where traffickers are punished but the structures reinforcing them remain untouched.

Another area where international cooperation needs to evolve: Cross-border investigations are a must, but they often prefer the sharing of intelligence than helping victims move from past lives and/ or are making reparations. A more humane approach would build up international compensation mechanisms, make victim status across borders portable, and support survivors to find the justice that does not require they retell their traumas in adversarial settings. Restorative justice models such as these carefully designed for survivors led by people who have experienced the crime themselves first hand could be used in criminal trials. They would focus on recognition, reparation, healing.

There is also an absence of ‘cultural humility.’ Trafficking-trend mythology all too often prostitutes the image of vict Before it is too late, rescuing needs to become listening. Humankind requires nothing less. Handmaid of is to me all grace for find life something habitable when not passing on falsehood to oneself or others that will have good reason truth is difficult few learn this before their lives are over.

Technology has made the scene even messier.Its digital platforms are both hotbeds for recruiting victims and at the same time enable rescuers and others to find victims.

The use of artificial intelligence to dig out online patterns increasingly extended its scope.This kind of strategy relies on surveillance, and abuses peoples’ privacy potentially even violates the law and behavior they are seeking to protect, especially traveling people in the quest for a better life.It’s discriminatory as well.Driver’s license interceptions are a policy of sentences that also make unnecessary distinguishing between people from different cultures, backgrounds and societies.Regular interruptions will not prevent interruptions of commerce embarked on by those who wish to earn an honest living or even their union supporters.

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A humane justice model calls for proportionality in punishment, transparency in decisionmaking and prevention of further abuses.

Where the global regime against human trafficking falls short, as so often in life, is simply in doing what it says. If we measure justice by the severity of a punishment, then suffering is made to stand in for a victory at trial. True justice restores and rehabilitates; it changes people and prevents future human trafficking. It gets at the root causes of things, destroys the systemic inequalities that permit such doings and restores people to their proper human state of grace.

The global war against human trafficking is now at a turning point. The laws are there. Data are piling up. Political conventions, too. What is not occurring is empathy institutionalized as policy. Justice is not justice at all without humanity.  It is nothing but a performance.

To bridge these gaps requires states to adopt a trauma-informed approach in their criminal justice systems, make available survivor-oriented services regardless of alignment with prosecuting objectives, hold corporations to account with genuine penalties for breaches of company obligations and incorporate the voices and experience of survivors into any reform plan. Only then will it be possible for the promise of the Palermo Protocol to become reality no longer merely judged by numbers of convictions, but as a testimonial proof that human dignity has been restored.

Ultimately, the war against human trafficking is not just about catching criminals. It’s about affirming human worth. Without humanity, justice is empty.

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