Harmony Guinn on Testing Anti-Trafficking Through Ethics: Rights, Duties, and Real-World Results

This paper uses ethical frameworks—rights-based, deontological, utilitarian, Eastern harmony, and Indigenous “seventh-generation” thinking, to examine child trafficking and forced labor. It shows why blanket bans can backfire and argues for a mixed approach: enforce protections while funding education and poverty reduction so families aren’t pushed into hidden exploitation.

READ PAPER (PDF)
Previous
Previous

Harmony Guinn on Modern Slavery in Supply Chains: Psychology + Law, Real Fixes

Next
Next

harmony guinn on Parity + Broadband: Fixing Rural Mental Health Access