As a member of the Center for Global Justice student staff
and a student intern this past summer, I have been blessed with the opportunity
to work on legal projects that not only give me valuable experience, but that
make an impact on important human rights issues in today’s society. The most
important thing that I have taken out of my work for the Center is the global
perspective and outward focus it helps me maintain in the world of law school.
The Center helps me keep my focus on the ultimate goal and the reason I came to
law school: to use law in a way that gives a voice to the voiceless.
The project that I have been working on this semester
personifies that goal. My team and I have been working on a project for Shared
Hope International, which primarily works to prevent and raise awareness of
human trafficking. Shared Hope wanted a memo on the topic of “bottom girls” and
how they are treated in human trafficking litigation. “Bottom girls” are the
lead prostitutes for pimps who are often in charge of the other prostitutes,
handling the money, scheduling meet-ups, etc. Due to their active role in
prostitution and the trafficking of minors with the pimps, they are frequently
charged with trafficking and sentenced the same as the pimps they work for. The
issue we have been examining is what happens when the bottom girl is a victim
of trafficking herself, and is therefore coerced by the pimp to engage in
trafficking? Do courts consider her a victim, or punish her the same as the
trafficker?
The cases we have been researching vary, but it is clear
that the violence bottom girls often experience needs to be considered more in
trafficking cases. With the memo that my team and I are creating, Shared Hope
will be a better position to promote awareness and advocate for bottom girls in
litigation.
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