The Transnational Duty to Prevent Human Traffickin

The Transnational Duty to Prevent Human Trafficking

The primary theme of the paper is The Transnational Duty to Prevent Human Trafficking in which you are required to emphasize its aspects in detail. The cost of the paper starts from $99 and it has been purchased and rated 4.9 points on the scale of 5 points by the students. To gain deeper insights into the paper and achieve fresh information, kindly contact our support.

The Transnational Duty to Prevent Human Trafficking

INSTRUCTIONS:

This is an Annotated Bibliography. Must be formatted in (strict) current Turabian style (guidelines) and include a title and a bibliography page. NO PLAGIARISM as I will check if it is OR not. DO NOT COPY ANNOTATION FROM PURELY THE "ABSTRACT" OR "CONCLUSION"; THOSE ARE NOT APPROPRIATE (as I will check if the annotations are copy or not). THIS MUST BE AN ORIGINAL, CUSTOM written annotated bibliography. This means, you must read the sources, then write the each annotation from what you read. Remember, this is a graduate (Master’s) level assignment, so make sure that it is – Graduate level academic writing on this assignment is very important. AGAIN, PLEASE REVIEW THE UPLOADED FILES THAT IS FULL OF INSTRUCTIONS AND THE GRADING RUBRIC.

CONTENT:

Ross, Megan. “A Diamond in the Rough : The Transnational Duty to Prevent Human Trafficking in the Protocol.” Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy 21, no. 325 (2014): 325–368. This article looks at the three-pronged approach of the Protocol, as well as the actual approaches utilized by State Parties in preventing human trafficking. It is focused on answering the question: “did State Parties intentionally sign themselves up for mandatory transnational obligations to address the root causes of human trafficking in countries of origin?”[The Protocol is the international legal framework for human trafficking. Its long name is: Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, Supplementing the United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime.] [States who are members of the Protocol are also called State Parties.] Written by Megan Ross, a legal consultant to the Alberta Civil Liberties Research Centre, the article maintains that human trafficking is a transnational issue and its impacts extend beyond national borders. If states hope to make a dent in the growing incident of human trafficking, they must take on this transnational view in creating policies. This way, solutions are made at the international level, and laws addressing human trafficking would be complementary from country to country. Moreover, Ross believes that the utilimate goal of the Protocol is prevention...

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