Resources—Posters and Awareness Campaign Materials Resources—Posters and Awareness Campaign Materials This page provides information about posters and awareness campaign materials about human trafficking for use in your community. BC’s Office to Combat Trafficking in Persons Do You Feel Trapped? Poster Bringing awareness about domestic servitude as a form of human trafficking, “Do you Feel Trapped?” is available in 5 languages: English, Filipino, Spanish, Punjabi, and Chinese. Copies of the poster can be ordered from BC’s Office to Combat Trafficking in Persons by visiting the following website: http://www.pssg.gov.bc.ca/victimservices/shareddocs/ pubs/publication-order-form.pdf RCMP I’m Not for Sale Posters These posters give members of the general public some key indicators of human trafficking to better identify victims. Support services to be contacted upon identification of a potential victim are also provided on the poster. • Public: http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/ht-tp/publications/ poster-affiche-sale-vendre-eng.htm • Youth (several options): http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/ht-tp/publications/ poster-affiche-youth-jeunes-eng.htm Graphic Design: oblik.ca Download and print the posters from the following websites: Do you need help? Communities Taking Action: A Toolkit to Address Human Trafficking If you or someone you know is a victim of human trafficking, call your local police, or Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1 800 222-TIPS (8477). OR Contact a counselor anonymously at the Kids Help Phone at 1 800 668-6868 or online at www.kidshelpphone.ca. For more information about human trafficking, go to www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca or www.deal.org. 1 Resources—Posters and Awareness Campaign Materials Children of the Street Society Posters Children of the Street Society is a BC based organization founded by parents of children who have been lured into the sex industry. They have developed posters that can be used to raise awareness about the sexual exploitation and human trafficking of youth in your community. New posters are provided each year, so check the website for recent additions to the list below. http://www.childrenofthestreet.com/ • Just One Photo Poster • “I Shared a Photo” Video on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=Avm7nr1kZhg#t=16 There’s no such thing as ‘just one photo’. Protect yourself from sexual exploitation. Be safe online. childrenofthestreet.com • Predator Watch Campaign Poster Predator Watch is an initative of Children of the Street Society that is part multi-media campaign, part law enforcement strategy. http://www.childrenofthestreet. com/#!predatorwatch/cz9k TruckSTOP Campaign TRUCKSTOP’s aim is to educate, equip, empower and mobilize members of the trucking industry to combat human trafficking as a regular part of their jobs. PACT– Ottawa (Persons Against the Crime of Trafficking in Humans) recognized that truck drivers were often positioned to spot human trafficking and developed the campaign to help truck drivers spot victims and report suspected vehicles. http://www.pact-ottawa.org/truckstop-resources.html Communities Taking Action: A Toolkit to Address Human Trafficking 2 Resources—Posters and Awareness Campaign Materials Stop Sex With Kids Campaign Canadian Centre for Child Protection has developed this campaign to end child sexual exploitation and human trafficking. The campaign has several phases and includes posters, transit ads, TV and radio ads that promote the message that “Sex with children isn’t child’s play. It’s sexual abuse”. Other parts of this campaign focus on the impact of sex trafficking on youth and addressing the demand side of the issue. The Canadian Centre for Child Protection also runs Cybertip.ca, a national tip line to report online sexual exploitation of children/youth. www.stopsexwithkids.ca Communities Taking Action: A Toolkit to Address Human Trafficking 3
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