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Essay / Human Trafficking and Female Sex Slaves - 1103
IntroductionSteve Galster and his team are in Thailand to help save thousands of women from sex slavery. Central Asia has made millions of dollars by preventing women and young children from being trafficked. In Bangkok, Thailand, sex becomes one of the lucrative committees that many foreign men turn to. Most clients are Middle Eastern men who travel to Thailand for sex and most women do the job willingly. The Uzbeks are one of the most well-known organizations involved in human trafficking. The Uzbeks have their organization at the Grace Hotel, where many Middle Eastern men are located. They lure women from their poor countries and promise them good work, but soon discover that they have been deceived and forced onto the streets to become prostitutes. The Thai government unit that does the black ops work is there to help Steve eliminate the Uzbeks. This is a professionally trained team that infiltrates and eliminates powerful individuals and organizations. Operation Graceland depends on Steve's team to help dozens of women fight trafficking. They capture one of the members and discover that he is one of the best in the ring; they threatened him with prison time to see if he would become an informant. They later eliminate two more members in the rings and continue until they destroy the entire organization. There are a ton of women and young children being trafficked as sex slaves all over the world, mostly in areas like Thailand or Central Asia. There are 1.5 million sex slaves today; most of them are in Asia, while the rest are in Thailand. I will analyze the many different people and organizations that are taking women away from their will by forcing them onto the streets....... middle of paper ...... free will.ReferencesCNN. CNN's Freedom Project: Ending Modern Slavery. Retrieved from http://thecnfreedomproject.blogs.com/category/the-facts/Dunn Ruth. (March 12, 2010) The three sociological perspectives/paradigms. Retrieved from http://cnx.org/content/m33962/latest/NP Homeland Security: Combating Human Trafficking (2014). Retrieved from http://www.dhs.gov/topic/human-trafficking.NP Polaris Project: For a world without slavery. Retrieved from http://www.polarisproject.org/Slavica. (March 15, 2011). Human trafficking: Use all three sociological perspectives to analyze your problem. [Blogger] Retrieved from http://truthabouthumantrafficking. blogspot.com/2011/.Social Cap. (July 29, 2013). Theoretical perspectives: introduction to sociology. Retrieved from http://cnx.org/content/m42792/latest/?collection=col11407/latest.