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Title
Human trafficking 2.0 the impact of new technologies |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/11394/8353 |
Date
2021 |
Author(s)
Rentzsch, Viola |
Contributor(s)
Hamman, Abraham J. |
Abstract
Magister Legum - LLM - Human history is traversed by migration. This manifold global phenomenon has shaped the world to its current state, moving people from one place to another in reaction to the changing world. The autonomous decision to permanently move locations represents only a segment of what is considered to be migration. Routes can be dangerous, reasons can be without any alternative, displacements forced, and journeys deadly. Arguably the most fatal of all long-distance global migration flows, the transatlantic slave trade has left an enduring legacy of economic patterns and persistent pain. Whilst the trade in human beings originated centuries before, with Europe's long history of slavery, this event represents an atrocious milestone in history. In a nutshell, European colonialists traded slaves for goods from African kings, who had captured them as war prisoners. |
Subject(s)
Privacy; Human trafficking; Data mining; Forced prostitution; Data protection |
Language
en |
Publisher
University of the Western Cape |
Rights
University of the Western Cape |
Repository
Cape Town - Theses and Dissertations, University of Western Cape
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Added to C-A: 2021-08-19;07:58:24 |
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