Projects: forced labour
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Integrated Programme on Fair Recruitment (FAIR) – Phase II
1 November 2018 - 31 October 2021
This global project seeks to contribute to the promotion of fair recruitment practices globally and across specific migration corridors in North Africa, the Middle East and South Asia. Target countries include Hong Kong SAR, Jordan, Nepal, the Philippines, Tunisia and Qatar.
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MAP16 Project: Measurement, awareness-raising and policy engagement to accelerate action against child labour and forced labour
2 January 2017 - 30 September 2022
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Integrated Programme on Fair Recruitment (FAIR)
1 August 2015 - 31 July 2018
This global project seeks to contribute to the promotion of fair recruitment practices globally and across specific migration corridors in North Africa, the Middle East and South Asia. Target countries for pilot projects include Tunisia, Jordan, Nepal and the Philippines.
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Work in Freedom: Preventing trafficking of women and girls in South Asia and the Middle East
1 January 2013 - 31 December 2018
The ILO-DFID “Work in Freedom” programme promotes empowerment and education, fair recruitment, safe migration and decent work for women and girls from South Asia, and thus contribute to the prevention of human trafficking in this region and in the Middle East.
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Eliminating Forced Labour and Trafficking in Jordan
26 February 2009 - 26 August 2010
The project seeks to strengthen government law enforcement capacity to identify, investigate and prosecute offences for forced labour and human trafficking; and support the establishment of an efficient and regulated recruitment mechanism.
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Forced Labour and Trafficking In Jordan - A Pilot Programme on the Qualified Industrial Zones
1 April 2007 - 31 March 2009
The project seeks to improve the law enforcement capacity of the government against trafficking for labour exploitation, with a particular focus on the export-oriented factories in Jordan’s Qualified Industrial Zones (QIZ), where there have been recent reports of severe labour exploitation which in the worst cases could amount to criminal trafficking.