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Home>Archives for News

February 12, 2014 by SHI Staff

Happy Birthday Abe! What We Learned From President Lincoln

Happy-Birthday-Abe-Feb-12-2014

President Abraham Lincoln has been herald as one of the early abolitionists, having drafted and signed the Emancipation Proclamation. While this national symbol of freedom does mark early efforts to abolish slavery, President Lincoln recognized its limitations. Here are a few lessons we learned from Abe:

Though Lincoln believed that slavery was morally wrong, he struggled to identify how to address it within the existing political system. Over 150 years later, we struggle with the same thing. Federal law identifies child sex slaves (rightfully) as trafficking victims; however, in states around the nation child victims fall under contradictory laws that label the child both a victim of trafficking and a perpetrator of prostitution. Their treatment is largely dependent on which label they receive from law enforcement officers, prosecutors, judges and service providers working on their case. Some children are identified as a victim of a crime but are charged with a delinquent offense to keep them in the safety of a detention center if therapeutic shelter options are unavailable. This is why we started the Protected Innocence Challenge. We outlined 41 legal provisions every state should have to protect children from trafficking. Check out how your state scored.

The Emancipation Proclamation did not free all slaves. In fact, the Proclamation specifically freed slaves in only 10 states “in rebellion against the United States,” namely southern Confederate states. Nearly one million people remained in slavery in the United States after the Proclamation was signed. Today, slavery continues to flourish. Sex and labor trafficking is a real and urgent crisis facing America. Experts estimate that at least 100,000 American children are trafficked within the U.S. each year.
Here are a few simple ways to tip your hat to Abe on his birthday by engaging in your own abolitionist efforts:

  1. Write your legislator. Send him/her your state report card and ask them to support important bills that relate to human trafficking.
  2. Support shelter and services in the United States. Give to Terry’s House, a residential program that offers free housing for survivors of trafficking so they can focus on their education.
  3. Teach youth warning signs and indicators of trafficking. Chosen will help this conversation. Order this 20-minute prevention film to show to teens in your community.

February 3, 2014 by SHI Staff

How Violence Plagues the Poor

“The locusts of everyday violence have been allowed to swarm unabated in the developing world. And they are laying waste to the hope of the poor.” – Gary A. Haugen and Victor Boutros in their new book, The Locust Effect 

As we work to combat sex trafficking in the U.S. and abroad, we come face to face every day with the reality that poor people are vulnerable to violence. Globally, the facts are stunning. According to International Justice Mission, nearly 30 million children, women and men are held as forced labor slaves. One in 5 women will be a victim of rape or attempted rape – and sexual violence makes everyday activities like going to school, gathering water, using a communal restroom or taking public transport dangerous.  IJM states that 4 billion people  – that most of the world’s poorest people – live in places where their justice systems don’t or can’t protect them from these kinds of “everyday violence.”

In the United States, homeless, runaway or impoverished youth are at increased risk of being commercially sexually exploited by traffickers and buyers. They are easily and quickly targeted as vulnerable and needy youth by traffickers seeking to exploit their body for cash. Unfortunately, the U.S. justice system often overlooks these youth, classifying them as delinquent and placing them into a system that only further perpetuates their belief that help is beyond reach.

In India and Nepal, it is not uncommon for women enrolled in our shelters to share stories of being sold into the brothels at a young age so their parents could pay rent or feed their siblings. Our friends tell horrific tales of violence committed by the hands of brutal buyers. Knowing only violence, they live in fear and slavery.

Our friends at International Justice Mission just put together this unforgettable video that shows what the world is up against as we work together to help our poorest neighbors.  You won’t want to miss the powerful moment at 1:48 – – our fight against poverty is worth safeguarding.

Want more? Check out The Locust Effect, by IJM’s president Gary A.  Haugen, which releases today.

January 29, 2014 by SHI Staff

Supporter Impact Video | 2013

 

RESTORATION
This year we partnered with 12 local shelter and service organizations in 5 countries to offer education, job skills, healing, community, medical care and FREEDOM to 453 survivors. We supported housing for 204 women and children. 4,640 HIV/AIDS related medical visits were made through outreach to potential trafficking victims in red light districts. We convened over 140 service providers and survivors at the National Colloquium to drive forward the discussion about services and shelter in America.

PREVENTION
We brought training to 2800 first responders, service providers, and community members in 22 states through 42 trainings and general education to over 4,500 activists. We expanded our training resources to include gang trafficking education and successfully integrated the Intervene Intake Tool in juvenile detention centers in Nevada, Florida, Maryland, D.C., New York, California to help identify trafficked youth. Shared Hope developed a youth sex trafficking prevention film, Chosen, to teach teens the warning signs of trafficking.

JUSTICE
This year we launched the Demanding Justice Project to combat demand by investigating criminal justice outcomes for buyers and testified to Congress about the problem of demand. We brought legal and advocacy assistance to 22 states, 16 of which strengthened their laws and raised their Protected Innocence grade. We protested Backpage.com to stop the sale of children online.

Thank you to the 2,000 Defenders, 317 Ambassadors, and thousands of supporters who stand with us. Who give their time, talent, and money to support our mission. We’ll continue to bring prevention education to youth and adults, stronger laws to states, training to first responders, shelter and service support and leadership, and new research until sexual slavery is abolished.

And to survivors — thank you. You are our strength and inspiration and we will continue fighting for you.

January 21, 2014 by SHI Staff

Defenders Super Bowl Campaign

getinthegameHow many of you have heard of the Super Bowl? Alright, who I am I kidding? Everyone has! Great food, the most creative ad campaigns of the year, and great football­—it’s pretty hard to miss. Millions of people participate in this day. According to a 2013 Retail Advertising and Marketing Association survey, approximately 75% of American consumers planned to watch the Super Bowl in 2013.

According to this survey, about $68 was spent per person on merchandise related to the Super Bowl.

This same survey predicted that in 2013 over $12.7 billion was spent on Super Bowl related purchases.

For me, this raised a question. What if, instead of spending hours of our time and billions of dollars on this event, we spent some time sharing the fact that New Jersey, home of the MetLife Stadium, still has a C grade on the Protected Innocence Challenge? What if we spent some of our time and money sharing the fact that an estimated 100,000 children every year are sexually exploited through prostitution?

At Shared Hope, we want to get 2014 started off right, and I’d like you to participate. 2014 is our year to make a difference in the world. On January 20, we are launching our Second Annual Defenders Super Bowl Campaign, and I’d like to invite you to participate. It’s time that we get men to step up and be true Defenders. It’s time that we end demand. It’s time to get in the game.

There are several ways that you can do this.

  1. If you haven’t already, take the Defenders Pledge. Make a free, public declaration that you are going to let your lifestyle protect the women and children around you.
  2. Share the Defenders Pledge with others. As an added incentive, if you recruit 15 men to take the pledge and they say that you inspired them to do so, we will give you a free Defenders V-neck shirt, while supplies last. We’ll sweeten the pot, if you get 30 men to take the pledge, we will throw in a Defenders polo shirt for FREE!
  3. Spread the word about human trafficking. Gear up with Defenders apparel from our store!
  4. Raise awareness about your state grade on the Protected Innocence Challenge. Spread the word on Facebook and Twitter. Share the link sharedhope.org/stategrades so your friends can see their state score and write their legislator about it!
  5. Engage with us! On the day of the Super Bowl (February 2nd), we will be tweeting, posting on Facebook, and posting a few blog entries. Your job is to spread the word to your community. Like, share, and retweet our messages! It’s time to get in the game. Use #knowthescore to add your voice to the Defenders conversation on Twitter.

Will you join us? It’s time to get in the game.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DefendersUSA

Twitter: https://twitter.com/thedefendersusa

Website: www.thedefendersusa.org

November 22, 2013 by Guest

Shared Hope Director, Nancy Winston, Receives Maryland Governor’s Service Award

By Melanie Mah

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Nancy Winston (right)

Twenty-seven Maryland residents were selected as recipients of the 30th Annual Governor’s Service Award, honored on November 4, 2013.

Nancy Winston, Senior Director at Share Hope International, was honored with the Governor’s Service Award as a Special Honoree.  This prestigious award is given to individuals who display an outstanding record of volunteerism and service.

Nancy has served as an integral part of Shared Hope since its inception. In the early days of Shared Hope, Nancy hosted President and Founder Linda Smith during her travel to Washington, D.C. and served as a local volunteer. As Shared Hope grew, so did Nancy’s position within Shared Hope and she was elected to sit on the Shared Hope International Board of Directors, a position she held for six years. During this time, Nancy assisted in organizing the War Against Trafficking Alliance in 2002. She participated in the Path Breaking Strategies Conference in Washington, DC in 2003 and in the Next Steps Conference in Mumbai in 2004, as well as the Justice Department Domestic Trafficking and Prostitution conference in Tampa in 2004 and the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children Mid Term Review in D.C. in 2006. She represented Shared Hope at the White House Office of Faith Based and Community Initiatives in 2007 and 2008. In 2008, she left her career in healthcare information technology at Cerner Corporation to begin a second career with Shared Hope International.

Today, Nancy is a Senior Director whose diverse responsibilities include speaking, writing, training, donor relations, restorative shelter initiatives, and partner relationships.

Since 2008, she has served on the Maryland Human Trafficking Task Force where she currently chairs the Legislative Committee is an active member the Victim Services committee. As a task force member and a Shared Hope employee, she provides expert testimony at committee hearings in the Maryland legislature in support of legislation that would toughen the state’s anti-trafficking laws.

Congratulations Nancy!

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