Human Trafficking and Personhood: Implications for Africans
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Date
2025
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Combating Human Trafficking
Abstract
There are many activities people engage in as a means of livelihood, and one such activity is human
trafficking, which has become a global concern to humanity as it manifests itself in varied forms such as
forced labor, child trafficking, baby factories, prostitution, organ harvesting, and debt bondage, among
others. Human traffickers take undue advantage of Africans due to the poor and pathetic state of most
African nations. Human traffickers could be Africans or not, colluding with foreign individuals or
organizations. Human trafficking, for pro-human traffickers, is a transnational lucrative business, while
for anti-human traffickers, it is illegal. As such, our lead questions are: How justifiable are the
conflicting viewpoints of pro-human and anti-human traffickers? How justifiable are the actions of
human traffickers benefitting at the expense of human value (trafficked victim)? How best can the
African government combat this age-long problem of human trafficking? Thus, adopting the analytic
method, we argue for the dignity of the African person (Africanness) and endorse “contentment” and
“alternative choice” as underlying principles for combating trafficking in human beings