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Showing posts from November, 2025

CIHTTF Revamp Meeting November 2025

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All fall semester the HTRL has been working with the Legal Aid Society Office in Decatur to revamp and revive the Central Illinois Human Trafficking Task Force. We sent out a survey in September looking for feedback. Then based on the fact that the vast majority of the respondents wanted to continue the task force and saw value in continuing the work we scheduled the first meeting in 2025. Due to staff turnover and the non-renewal of the federal grant we are working as a volunteer task force so no one had stepped up to take up the work to try and organize a meeting since December 2024. We decided that Legal Aid Society would run the meetings and the HTRL would run the logistics so we set the agenda and my student Cassidy took the meeting minutes. We had a few technical difficulties trying to change the meeting from Teams to Zoom because after you send a meeting invite I couldn't change the link but most people were able to come over to the Zoom meeting. We compiled and presented th...

Policy Brief on Adjudication Article

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After starting this research project in Fall 2020, I am happy to say that we have finally finished the analysis from our adjudication project. Like all of our research projects in the lab we formulated a research brief based on our results which can be read here . It took five years to file 66 Freedom of Information Requests for arrest records from 2010-2020 and then analyze 326,719 arrests from the 16 counties where we received data. In total, we filed requests to 40 States’ Attorneys offices, 19 Sheriff's Offices, four with County Clerks offices, two FOIA Officers, and one with a Public Access Bureau. Then, we conducted three cycles of coding analyzing public records (legal search databases, local court documents, and newspapers) related to the case for elements of human trafficking. Our analysis of ‘second generation’ state level human trafficking related cases between 2010-2020 revealed that the majority of the state-level trafficking-related cases in Central Illinois were char...

Statewide Human Trafficking Task Force Meeting

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I was able to attend the Illinois Statewide Human Trafficking Task Force meeting yesterday while I was traveling and it was eye opening. Social service providers in my break out groups reported a decrease in foreign born forced labor survivors/victims coming forward because they are afraid to seek help or even leave their houses and go outside due to immigration enforcement. Others reported an increase in victims/survivor numbers but agreed that there are long last impacts and significant impediments to identification with the large scale immigration enforcement across the state. Many organizations now have to offer online services to meet the needs of their clients because otherwise people would not seek assistance. In addition to the significant federal funding cuts for human trafficking victim services this is just another worrying trend that is emerging from the current administration that inhibits anti-trafficking work around the United States.

WCIA News Story on Human Trafficking Laws

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In the midst of all of the planning for the Global Freedom Summit this week I was asked to give an interview with WCIA News on Illinois' second place ranking for human trafficking policy in the US. Though the interview was online, a camera person came to the Human Trafficking Research Lab to get so B-roll footage to go with the story (picture below). I was proud to talk about the rankings and be part of the Joint Human Trafficking Working group that developed the Illinois Statewide Trauma-Informed Response to Trafficking Act. It's also pretty cool to be featured in an interview along with the Illinois State Police Director. Here is the link to the story if you would like to watch the interview " Big changes in the state led to Illinois being ranked near the top for human trafficking survivor laws ." 

A21 Global Freedom Summit at Millikin

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  Yesterday was the implementation of our A21 Global Freedom Summit class project! We had over 50 people from the community and one student went down to the cafeteria to bring up more attendees. The students in my PO 323 Human Trafficking developed an interactive game, educational information to teach people about human trafficking, a public relations strategy, and an advocacy table to advocate change in our community (with QR codes and post cards to mail to representatives). The human trafficking button making was a hit and many people played the roll your fate human trafficking scenario game that students developed. The new Millikin president even stopped by and chatted with students. We also had the event featured in our student newspaper The Decaturian " A21’s Global Freedom Summit Comes to Millikin " and the Decatur Tribune " Millikin University to host anti-trafficking Global Freedom Summit film screening ." In class the next day we debriefed on what went well...