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  1. A 2016 Public Safety report released statistics that indicate that, while Indigenous women only make up 4% of the Canadian population, they roughly make up 50% of trafficking victims. Women under the age of 18 make up approximately a quarter of the victims of human trafficking.

  2. Sep 30, 2024 · Across Canada, Indigenous women and girls are at a heightened risk of trafficking because of the intersecting factors they face as a result of colonization. This includes homelessness, poverty, and struggles with mental health and addictions.

  3. Jun 20, 2022 · The trafficking of Indigenous women, girls, and gender-diverse peoples has been normalized in Canada through historical processes that have been transformed over time, but which persist as ubiquitous expressions of colonial violence.

  4. Introduction. Indigenous women are disproportionality affected by racialized violence in Canada through exposure to both historic and ongoing gendered discrimination.

  5. Human trafficking of Indigenous women and girls in Canada is a widespread issue across the country. Decades of state interventions have done little to stop the trafficking and sexual exploitation of Indigenous peoples and in some cases have contributed to the problem.

  6. Human trafficking is a difficult issue to address — it’s a purposefully hidden practice affecting and exploiting millions around the world. But despite its invisible nature, it’s abundantly clear that Indigenous women and girls are disproportionately affected in Canada.

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  8. Aug 3, 2020 · This suggests that Indigenous communities and agencies in urban areas and institutions, such as policing and health care, may want to attempt working together in ways that support victims of trafficking to escape from it.

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