ABSTRACT:
Human trafficking remains one of the most persistent and egregious human rights violations in the 21st century. Despite growing international consensus and legal mechanisms designed to combat it, trafficking networks have expanded in both scale and sophistication. The phenomenon is not merely criminal in nature; it is fundamentally tied to structural inequalities, neoliberal globalization, systemic gender discrimination, and failures in governance. This research critically examines the multifaceted causes and consequences of human trafficking, contextualizing it within broader social, economic, and political frameworks. Through a combination of theoretical analysis, empirical data, and regional case studies—particularly in South Asia—this study exposes the contradictions in global policy efforts and the weaknesses of state-centric approaches. It also underscores the necessity of adopting a rights-based, survivor-led framework to ensure justice, protection, and long-term rehabilitation. The paper ultimately calls for a structural rethinking of both international and domestic responses to human trafficking and emphasizes the urgent need for transnational solidarity, ethical economic practices, and accountable governance systems.
Cite this article:
Dhananjay Kumar. Human Trafficking in the 21st Century: A Crisis of Exploitation, Governance, and Global Indifference. Research Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences. 2025;16(4):326-2. doi: 10.52711/2321-5828.2025.00054
Cite(Electronic):
Dhananjay Kumar. Human Trafficking in the 21st Century: A Crisis of Exploitation, Governance, and Global Indifference. Research Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences. 2025;16(4):326-2. doi: 10.52711/2321-5828.2025.00054 Available on: https://rjhssonline.com/AbstractView.aspx?PID=2025-16-4-14
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