Human Trafficking: A Review of Germany and Canada

The proposed research is to study the policing and secularity methods used by the Canadian and German governments to combat the illegal trafficking of humans within and without sovereign nations. The current application of the Canadian justice system against trafficking has yielded alarmingly low conviction rates. Findings in Germany will stand as a comparison to the system in Canada. The goal of this comparison is to gain an understanding of what is needed to develop a stronger and more robust system in Canada.
The research is expected to draw parallels between the two systems and find areas that need improvement. This will lead to a publication that will add to the exceedingly thin literature surrounding the subject of human trafficking in Canada.

Faculty Supervisor:

Arne Kislenko

Student:

Partner:

University of Osnabrück

Discipline:

Sociology

Sector:

Education

University:

Toronto Metropolitan University

Program:

Globalink Research Award

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