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- The National Strategy to Combat Human Trafficking (National Strategy) is a five-year (2019-2024) strategy aiming to strengthen Canada’s response to human trafficking. It is a whole of government endeavour that aligns efforts with the internationally recognized pillars of prevention, protection, prosecution and partnership.
www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/vltn-ntnl-strtgy-cmbt-hmn-trffckng-smmry-2024/index-en.aspxSummary of the Horizontal Evaluation of the National Strategy ...
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This five-year National Strategy will strengthen Canada’s response to human trafficking and support broader Government of Canada commitments, including preventing and addressing gender-based violence, and supporting the safety and security of Indigenous peoples.
National Strategy to Combat Human Trafficking, 2019-2024. View PS4-254-2019-eng.pdf (PDF, 637 KB). View index-en.aspx (HTML, N/A). Issued also in French under title: Stratégie nationale de lutte contre la traite des personnes, 2019-2024. Cover title. Issued by: Public Safety Canada.
- Canada. Public Safety Canada.
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May 23, 2024 · The National Strategy is supported by an investment of over $60 million (2019-2024) and $10 million on-going to advance specific measures to address human trafficking under five pillars: empowerment, prevention, protection, prosecution, and partnerships.
Led by the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, the National Strategy builds on previous anti-human trafficking efforts, supports the broader Government of Canada commitment to prevent and address gender-based violence, and aligns with Canada’s international commitments.
The new Strategy takes a whole-of-government approach that will: empower victims and survivors to regain self-confidence and control over their lives; prevent more of these crimes from taking place; better protect those who are most vulnerable to trafficking; prosecute human traffickers for their heinous crimes; and.
This is the second Annual Report on the progress of Canada's National Strategy to Combat Human Trafficking, which launched on September 4, 2019. This report covers anti-human trafficking activities between April 1, 2020 to March 31, 2021 and identifies areas of future federal focus and action.
The National Strategy to Combat Human Trafficking (2019-2024) brings together all federal efforts that aim to address human trafficking in Canada and abroad under one strategic plan.