Seeing the Invisible: Identifying Child Trafficking in the Modern World

13th Feb 2018

While identification of trafficked children has improved, more needs to be done to eradicate the practice. But, with Brexit potentially leading to tighter borders, many more children could be at risk. In 2014-15, 590 children were identified as being trafficked or suspected of being trafficked, with the majority of cases...

Read Full Article
The best way to reach people is to tell them stories. It’s a tried and tested method going back millennia – and it’s one we used in some Lewisham schools.
We can use social media to build community, to promote research, and to impart ideas and expertise on issues that impact on health and well being.
We have a duty to help refugees in desperate need; they need to be treated with respect and dignity. But instead Hungary is locking them up.
It's time we put in place a proper procedure around teenage sexting to help vulnerable children understand the consequences of their actions
I have argued ceaselessly during the past decade about how vital it is to use partnership information to make better and earlier decisions concerning the identification of need, harm and risk to children and vulnerable adults. But this has to be within the law – and the rights of every...
Most things are socially defined by what people say or do, or how they are in their social groups and teams. “Through the eyes of a child, all professionals are all simply adults with authority”. They do not necessarily see or understand professional training, status, qualifications or experience. They also...
How Suffolk responded to reports of missing persons in Ipswich that subsequently led to the murder hunt for the Ipswich prostitute murders
This is the first in a series of guest blogs by ex Detective Superintendent Alan Caton OBE about the Ipswich prostitute murders . In the winter months of 2006, I found myself at the centre of the biggest murder investigation ever in the UK. At that time I was the...
Prostitution is a very complex and difficult subject on which there are many controversial and diverse views.
In this, my third blog in the series, I will outline how Suffolk Police and their partners responded to the issue of prostitution after women were murdered.
It was reminder of how times are changing and couldn’t have come any sooner for three girls about to be sent overseas to undergo female genital mutilation.
This is my second blog in the Harmful Cultural Practice series.  With all the reports of migrants hiding in trucks and beneath trains to reach the UK, an average Briton would probably imagine the country to be under virtual siege from abroad. While much of the British press has helped...
This is my third blog in the Harmful Cultural Practice series Forced Marriage is exactly that; forcing someone to marry against their will. It is appalling practice and is recognised in the UK as a form of violence against women and men, domestic and child abuse, and a serious breach of human rights....
Having a multiagency model for children’s pathways incorporating Early Help and Safeguarding ensures coordination between professionals and families.
Children and young people are often the most vulnerable members of our communities with local authorities and their partners providing social care support to those experiencing the highest levels of problems. Nevertheless, it is important that all partners and communities provide effective and co-ordinated help and support to children and...
When the new Domestic Abuse, Stalking and Harassment and Honour Based Violence (DASH) model was introduced in 2009, for the first time it enabled police services and partner agencies to use a common checklist to identify and assess risk with victims of domestic abuse. Since then model has become solidly...
In the UK and internationally the face of public services has changed dramatically in the past three decades. This is as a result of political beliefs and fast moving government policies that impact on provision in the wake of the financial crisis. This has influenced how we as professionals will...
Government has published a new action plan for tackling child sexual exploitation, including an extension of the wilful neglect offence to children’s social care, education and elected members where people have been found to have failed in their duty to take action in respect of cases of abuse and neglect....
The social work profession has come under a lot of pressure recently as social workers find themselves caught up in damaging public debates about their role in keeping children and families safe. Accusations of failure and incompetence appear in the press regardless of the myriad reasons behind these so-called practice...
All families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. Leo Tolstoy: Anna Karenina This quote from Tolstoy is a timely – and timeless – reminder of how much grief and unhappiness exists behind the closed doors of the family home. Across the UK there are countless...
When three teenage girls flew to Syria to join Islamic State earlier this year, there was a lot of soul searching across the UK. Newspapers claimed Britain was losing the battle to stop extremists radicalising young people online through chat rooms and social media networks. Former government minister Lady Warsi...
When I read a BBC article about Violence against Women recently I was alarmed about the increase in prosecutions in 2014/2015.  It said that A Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) report in June 2015 showed more than 107,000 prosecutions in the year to April. An increase of 16,000 (18%) on the previous year....
It is critical that the next government defines what we should expect of social workers working with our most vulnerable children, young people and families. The five main political parties in England and Wales revealed their manifestos in April outlining plans for the country if elected on 7 May 2015....
Can localism work during a time of huge public sector funding cuts? It’s a question that goes to the heart of front line service delivery. A few months ago Olly Martins, Bedfordshire’s Police & Crime Commissioner, devised what he thought was a practical way to fund 100 more police officers...