Thomas V Galli’s research while affiliated with Chaminade University of Honolulu and other places

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Publications (1)


Economics of Human Trafficking
  • Article

August 2010

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1,949 Reads

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172 Citations

International Migration

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Edward J Schauer

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Thomas V Galli

Because freedom of choice and economic gain are at the heart of productivity, human trafficking impedes national and international economic growth. Within the next 10 years, crime experts expect human trafficking to surpass drug and arms trafficking in its incidence, cost to human well-being, and profitability to criminals (Schauer and Wheaton, 2006: 164–165). The loss of agency from human trafficking as well as from modern slavery is the result of human vulnerability (Bales, 2000: 15). As people become vulnerable to exploitation and businesses continually seek the lowest-cost labour sources, trafficking human beings generates profit and a market for human trafficking is created. This paper presents an economic model of human trafficking that encompasses all known economic factors that affect human trafficking both across and within national borders. We envision human trafficking as a monopolistically competitive industry in which traffickers act as intermediaries between vulnerable individuals and employers by supplying differentiated products to employers. In the human trafficking market, the consumers are employers of trafficked labour and the products are human beings. Using a rational-choice framework of human trafficking we explain the social situations that shape relocation and working decisions of vulnerable populations leading to human trafficking, the impetus for being a trafficker, and the decisions by employers of trafficked individuals. The goal of this paper is to provide a common ground upon which policymakers and researchers can collaborate to decrease the incidence of trafficking in humans.

Citations (1)


... Considering victims originate from vulnerable populations, when they are placed in even direr situations these individuals can be easily controlled through violence, coercion and threats (Sigmon, 2008;Bales, Trodd, & Williamson, 2009). Despite the dreadful nature of the crime, human trafficking is growing at an alarming rate and, in the next ten years, it is predicted to surpass both drug and arms trafficking to become the largest form of criminal activity in incidence (Dijk and Mierlo, 2014;United Nations;Winterdyk & Reichel, 2010;Wheaton et al., 2010). The current prevalence rates are staggering as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) conservatively estimates that at any one time there are 2.5 million people living as human trafficking victims (Potrafke, 2013). ...

Reference:

Income Distribution and Human Trafficking Outflows
Economics of Human Trafficking
  • Citing Article
  • August 2010

International Migration