Global Criminal Justice
Instructions For Paper:
Title – well thought out, attention grabbing; more than just the general topic of the paper
Introduction & Thesis Statement – detailed background/context of the topic with a clear, well-articulated embedded statement of the central argument (roughly 2-3 pages for a 20 page paper)
Body – well-organized content with precise and descriptive headings and subheadings
Argument – a rigorous discussion and analysis of the topic with ample relevant evidence, examples or case study material to support the central and related arguments
Conclusion (not a summary) – provides a commentary on the significance of the research and possible subsequent areas of research
Citations – appropriate for your major/discipline and consistent (parenthetical, footnote or endnote)
Bibliography – an accurate and complete bibliography (NOT “Works Cited”) again, appropriate for your major/discipline
Overall style & formatting – appropriate for your discipline
Additional Features – potentially useful but not required:
Use of Appendices – The purpose of a set of appendices is to provide supplemental material for the reader. Typically this could include quantitative information, full or excerpted text of legal documents, etc.
Explanatory Footnotes or Endnotes – The purpose is to provide additional information to the reader without detracting from the primary line of reasoning in the paper.
BELOW IS THE OUTLINE
Sex Trafficking Around The World
Intro
Lays out the Significance of Sex Trafficking and its ties to Global Criminal Justice. How can
Main Reasons For Trafficking
While the focus is primarily on Sex Trafficking, it is helpful to explain both common kinds of trafficking so that it is clear what the aim of the paper is.
Sex Trafficking
Define what exactly Sex Trafficking Is and where it happens.
(Hodge, 2008) and (Kara, 2009) and (Bernat & Winkeller, 2010)
Labor
Brief explanation of Trafficking for the purpose of Labor.
(Andrees, 2008)
About the Victims
Brief explanation about who the victims of Sex Trafficking Are. It’s not just woman who are sex trafficked.
(Kara, 2009) and (Macias et al., 2013)
Who is most likely to become a victim?
Explain the statistics on who is more likely to be a victim when it comes to gender, age, race, location.
(UNODC, 2020) and (Deshpande and Nour, 2013)
Causes of Sex Trafficking
Dive into what exactly are the main causations of sex trafficking such as recruitment, poverty and spousal.
Recruitment of Woman
Explain how victims are recruited focusing on the broader issues as opposed to the more specifics later on. Explain the “why” when it comes to recruitment.
(Kara, 2009) and (Marcus et al., 2014)
Thrives on Poverty
Focus on how poverty is a huge factor when it comes to sex trafficking. How it corelates with why some victims decide to dive into it.
(Raymond et al., 2009)
Spousal






