Over 49.6 million
people are currently
being trafficked.

Human trafficking is the exploitation of people for profit through recruiting, transporting, transferring, or harboring them by force, fraud, or deception. Across the globe, one driver of trafficking is consistent: economic vulnerability.

Trafficking is estimated to generate $236 billion annually. Poverty, lack of access to safe work, and financial instability increase the risk of trafficking and re-trafficking.

Without safe options for income, vulnerability persists, trapping individuals and families in cycles of risk and exploitation.

Human trafficking is fueled by generational cycles of poverty and exploitation.

80%

of those experiencing commercial sexual exploitation worldwide are women and girls.

66%

of those forced into early marriage worldwide are women and girls.

64%

of victims in the U.S. are experiencing homelesness when recruited into a trafficking situation.

95%

of sex trafficking victims in North America are female.

"Poverty and economic marginalization are primary drivers that make women and girls vulnerable to exploitation, which is why we must harness the power of the private sector to create pathways to safe employment, ethical supply chains, and economic stability. More organizations are operating in line with the Ten Principles of the United Nations Global Compact.However, our efforts alone are insufficient to create the world we want. That takes meaningful partnerships with organizations like Nomi Network, whose programs focused on workforce development and ethical supply chains are invaluable to our collective goals of creating a culture of integrity and upholding our responsibilities to people and the planet.”
-Adam Gordon, Interim Executive Director, UN Global Compact Network USA