ÒConfronting Global
Sex Slavery in the 21st CenturyÓ
The WomenÕs Studies Committee of South Texas College is hosting
its third annual conference to address the horrifying realities of the Human
Sex Trafficking trade. Almost one million people are trafficked across international
borders each year and countless thousands more are kidnapped or sold within
their own countries. Worldwide, sex trafficking is a 12-billion-dollar-a-year
business. The sale of women and children is one of the fastest growing criminal
industries in the world. Most of
these women and children are forced to work as prostitutes and are often sold
multiple times. They are required
to pay off their debt for ÒfreedomÓ while their owner makes tens or even
hundreds of thousands of dollars. To control them, pimps and traffickers
physically and psychologically brutalize sex workers, threatening to kill
family members of the unwilling.
The conference will address both the supply and demand side of the
sex trafficking industry. We will
question what cultural, social, economic, and psychological conditions have led
to the tragic explosion of demand for trafficked persons and the marketing of
sex tours to the third world. We
will explore whether legalized prostitution and the growing social acceptance
of pornography create tolerance for the sexual exploitation of women. We will
also focus on the increasingly globalized and privatized economic conditions
that perhaps foster the growing market in human flesh worldwide, displacing
millions of people and leaving them vulnerable to the wealthy and the powerful.
Our goals are to raise awareness about the pervasiveness of the
sex-trafficking business, to explore the deeper causes of sex trafficking, and
ultimately to take part in the larger international conversation about how to
stop this insidious crime. We hope to address these questions and to consider
forms of resistance to this deplorable exploitation of millions, which
undermines basic respect for human rights and dignity.
Main Location:
Cooper Center, Pecan
Campus
South Texas
College
3200 W. Pecan Blvd
McAllen, Texas
Agenda
Tuesday, March 31st
6:30 – 7:30
pm Opening reception.
7:30 – 9:00 pm Film ÒSvetlanaÕs JourneyÓ Introduction by Michael Cory-Davis, Director/Producer.
Wednesday, April 1st
9:00 – 9:15
Opening Remarks,
9:15 – 9:45
ÒI Stop TrafficÓ - Human Trafficking
Awareness Campaign Film Clips
Michael Cory-Davis, Actor, Director and
Activist
9:45 – 10:00
Break
10:00 –11:30
Keynote Speaker: ÒThe
Johns-Sex for Sale and the Men who Buy ItÓ
Victor Malarek, Senior Reporter, Canadian Television (CTV) and author of The Natashas and The Johns: Sex for Sale
and the Men who Buy It
11:30 –12:00
Book signing
12:00 – 1:00 Lunch
1:00 – 2:20 ÒEnd
Demand, Illinois: A Statewide Campaign to Reform Illinois Prostitution and Sex
Trafficking LawsÓ
Rachel Durchslag, Director,
Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation
Samir Goswami, Policy Director, Chicago
Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation
2:20– 2:30 Break
2:30 – 3:30 "An
Overview of Types of Major Sex Trafficking Networks in the United States"
Bradley Myles, Deputy Director, Polaris
Project
3:30 – 4:45 "From
Hope to Despair: Human Trafficking
from the Former Soviet Union"
Kate S. Transchel, PhD, Lantis
Professor of History, California State University, Chico, California
4:45 – 5:15 Panel: Human Slavery – Creative Writing
Moderator:
Marisa Taylor, South Texas College
Katherine Hoerth, MFA Scholar, University of Texas Pan-American
Dalel
Serda, MFA Scholar, University of Texas Pan American
5:15 – 6:30 Break
(on your own)
6:30 – 7:30 Featured
Speaker: ÒThe Price of Sex: Women
SpeakÓ
Mimi Chakarova, Photojournalist, UC Berkeley and Stanford University
7:30 – 9:00 Art
Reception
Thursday, April 2nd
9:00 – 10:00 ÒHuman
Trafficking 101 & Domestic TraffickingÓ
Anna Rodriguez, Founder and Director,
Florida Coalition against Human Trafficking
10:00 – 11:00 ÒBilateral
Problems and Community Solutions to Human Trafficking: Replicable Border StrategiesÓ
Marisa Ugarte, Director, Bilateral
Safety Corridor Coalition, San Diego, CA
11:00 – 11:15 Break
11:15 – 12:30 ÒThe
Experience of Sex Trafficking Victims in the U.S. Legal SystemÓ
Terry Coonan, Executive Director of the
FSU Center for the Advancement of Human Rights,
Law and
Criminology Professor, Florida State University
12:30
– 1:30 Lunch
1:30 – 2:45 Regional
Studies Panel:
Moderator:
Denese McArthur, South Texas College
ÒFeminization
of Migration and Trafficking of Women in Mexico: The Case of Monterrey
Metropolitan ZoneÓ
Arun Kumar Acharya, PhD, Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales, Universidad
Aut—noma de Nuevo Le—n, Monterrey, MŽxico "Politics and Economy of Sex
Trade in Indonesia."
Olga Turner, MA Scholar, WomenÕs Studies, Florida Atlantic
University
2:45 –3:00 Break
3:00 – 4:00 ÒCommunity
Awareness: The First Step in
Rescuing VictimsÓ
Maria
Trujillo, Executive Director, Houston
Rescue and Restore Coalition
4:00 – 5:30 Panel: Human Trafficking – A
Presentation and Panel on State /Local Issues and Challenges
Moderator: Corinna
Spencer-Scheurich, Attorney, South Texas Civil Rights Project
Panelists: Diana
Velardo, (University of Houston Law Center, Clinical Supervisor, Crime Victims
Coordinator; Chair of Coalition against Human Trafficking)
Erica Schommer (Texas Rio
Grande Legal Aid, Attorney/Human Trafficking Team Manager)
Bill
Bernstein (Mosaic Family Services, Dallas,
Deputy Director)
Olga
Delarosa (United States AttorneysÕ
Office, Victim Witness Specialist, U.S.
Department of Justice, Southern District of Texas)
5:30 – 6:30 Dinner
6:30 – 7:30 Featured
Speaker: ÒThe Price of Pleasure"
Robert
Jensen, PhD, Associate Professor,
School of Journalism, University of Texas, Austin
Friday, April 3rd
9:00 – 9:45 ÒThe
Commoditization of Human Beings: Globalization and the Legal Mechanisms to
Combat Human TraffickingÓ
Luz Nagle, Professor of Law, Stetson University, Florida
9:45 – 10:15 ÒThe Role
of Female Legislators in Passing Trafficking Legislation on the State LevelÓ
Vanessa Bouche, Ph.D Scholar, Political
Science, Ohio State University
10:15 – 10:30 Break
10:30 – 11:00 ÒFederal
Sentencing Issues Involving Sex TraffickingÓ
Alan Dorhoffer, Deputy Director, Officer of Education and Sentencing
Practice, United States Sentencing Commission
11:00 – 12:00 ÒInter-agency
Collaboration on Human Trafficking: Drawing on Experience from Past CasesÓ
Christopher Burchell, Bexar County
Sheriff, Human Trafficking Task Force Leader
12:00 – 1:00 Lunch
1:00 – 2:00
ÒImmigration Remedies and Other Benefits for Human Trafficking Victims: Law
Enforcement and Legal Options Available to Foreign National Victims of Human TraffickingÓ
Erica Schrommer, Attorney, Texas Rio
Grande Legal Aid
2:00 – 3:30 ÒFinding
Human Trafficking Victims in Your Community: Investigative Techniques to
Identify and Rescue VictimsÓ
Christopher Burchell, Bexar County
Sheriff, Human Trafficking Task Force Leader.
This agenda is tentative and subject to change.