Forced labour, modern slavery and human trafficking
Facts and figures
- 49.6 million people were living in modern slavery in 2021, of which 27.6 million were in forced labour and 22 million in forced marriage.
- Of the 27.6 million people in forced labour, 17.3 million are exploited in the private sector; 6.3 million in forced commercial sexual exploitation, and 3.9 million in forced labour imposed by state.
- Women and girls account for 4.9 million of those in forced commercial sexual exploitation, and for 6 million of those in forced labour in other economic sectors.
- 12% of all those in forced labour are children. More than half of these children are in commercial sexual exploitation.
- The Asia and the Pacific region has the highest number of people in forced labour (15.1 million) and the Arab States the highest prevalence (5.3 per thousand people).
- Addressing decent work deficits in the informal economy, as part of broader efforts towards economic formalization, is a priority for progress against forced labour.
News
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Ship to shore
ILO, EU, Stella Maris partner to protect Filipino migrant fishers
02 August 2023
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© Ministry of Defense of Spain 2023
Podcast
Podcast: Fighting human trafficking in an era of crisis – how can we do better?
28 July 2023
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Forced labour
Joint labour inspection to prevent forced labour in Indonesia’s fishing sector
28 July 2023
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© Illustration by Olivia Newsome 2023
Modern slavery
They were taking nearly everything I earned, I lived in fear
27 July 2023
Focus on
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The Fair Recruitment Initiative
The ILO has launched a global “Fair Recruitment Initiative” to: (i) help prevent human trafficking; (ii) protect the rights of workers, including migrant workers, from abusive and fraudulent practices during the recruitment and placement process; and (iii) reduce the cost of labour migration and enhance development gains.
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2030 Agenda for sustainable development
ILO contributions to achieve SDG Targent 8.7
Take immediate and effective measures to eradicate forced labour, end modern slavery and human trafficking, and end child labour in all its forms.
It's time to ratify the ILO's Forced Labour Protocol
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The new legally-binding ILO Protocol on Forced Labour aims to strengthen global efforts towards combating forced labour, trafficking and slavery-like practices. Governments now have the opportunity to ratify the Protocol and integrate new measures at the national and regional levels to combat this crime.
Publications
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Country Baselines
2022 Annual Review under the follow-up to the ILO 1998 Declaration - Compilation of baseline tables, by country
23 June 2023
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© ILO 2023
Project results in Peru
Results of the CLEAR Cotton project in Peru
28 February 2023
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© ILO 2023
Project results in Pakistan
Results of the CLEAR Cotton project in Pakistan
28 February 2023