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Child Exploitation and Trafficking: Examining Global Enforcement and Supply Chain Challenges and U.S. Responses

Child Exploitation and Trafficking: Examining Global Enforcement and Supply Chain Challenges and U.S. Responses

Current price: $72.00
Publication Date: December 14th, 2016
Publisher:
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
ISBN:
9781442264793
Pages:
556
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

This book provides an updated, comprehensive introduction to the moral, legal, and political realities of the epidemic of child sexual exploitation and labor trafficking. Written from the perspective of those who have spent their careers in the trenches, the book provides much-needed practical thinking for those involved in this challenging area.

About the Author

The Hon. Virginia M. Kendall was appointed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois in January 2006. She has sat by designation with the Seventh, Ninth, and Federal Circuit Courts of Appeals and served six years on the Judicial Conference's Codes of Conduct Committee. Prior to her appointment, she served as Deputy Chief in the Criminal Division of the United States Attorney's Office in Chicago where she worked for over ten years and tried numerous jury trials. During her tenure as an Assistant United States Attorney, she was appointed to the US Attorney General's Advisory Committee which reviewed all multi-jurisdictional child exploitation cases and acted as the Child Exploitation Coordinator in the Northern District of Illinois. She teaches law courses in trial practice, federal litigation, and human trafficking at University of Chicago Law School, Northwestern University School of Law and Loyola University Chicago School of Law. Aside from her own writing, she also serves as an editor of Litigation Journal and is a member of the American Law Institute where she serves as an Advisor to the drafting of a model penal code for sexual offenses. Judge Kendall lectures extensively both domestically and internationally to train judges, trial attorneys and investigators in the areas of trial law, rule of law, ethics, terrorism trials, crimes against women and children, human trafficking and public corruption. Internationally, she has traveled through the State Department, the Department of Justice, Lawyers Without Borders, Vital Voices, and various bar associations to Kenya, Egypt, Zambia, Liberia, Cyprus, India, Croatia, Latvia, Lithuania, Italy, the UK, Thailand, China, Japan and the Vatican to teach judges and trial attorneys. Domestically, she created a human trafficking training module for task forces and for judges and she regularly holds seminars to educate them and the public. She holds leadership positions in the American Bar Association, the International Bar Association, the Federal Bar Association and the Federal Circuit Bar Association. ​Judge Kendall has received numerous awards including the St. Robert Bellarmine Award, the Damen Award, and the Distinguished Jurist Award from Loyola University for her distinguished legal work and her service to the community; the Rape Victim Advocate's Visionary Award for her work with victims of sexual violence; the Eleanor Roosevelt Leadership Award for being a courageous and compassionate role model; the Women and Gender Rights Leadership Award from DePaul University School of Law; and an honorary degree from Dominican University which she received with her husband for their dual work serving the community. T. Markus Funk, prior to entering private practice, served as a federal prosecutor, Section Chief with the U.S. State Department-Balkans, clerk with the federal court of appeals and district court, and law professor at, among other institutions, Oxford University, Northwestern, and the University of Chicago. He is the founding Co-Chair of Perkins Coie's Supply Chain Compliance Practice (the first such dedicated practice among the largest 100 law firms), the founding Chair of the American Bar Association's Anti-Trafficking Task Force (2007), "Lawyer of the Year" (2013), Colorado's "Best Overall Litigator" and "Top White Collar Lawyer" (2015), and "10 Best Attorneys for the State of Illinois" (2014). During his time in public service, Markus and his team prosecuted "Operation Family Secrets," which National Public Radio lauded as "one of the most important criminal investigations . . . in American history." From 2004-06, Markus served as the Department of Justice Resident Legal Advisor for post-war Kosovo, helping oversee Balkan-wide efforts to modernize anti-trafficking and anti-corruption enforcement, and spear-heading the restructuring of Kosovo's post-conflict justice system. In recognition of his service while abroad, the U.S. Department of State conferred upon Markus its "Superior Honor Award," which is the highest general service award the State Department confers (Markus is the only person to have received both the Department of Justice's Attorney General's Award for Nation's top trial performance and the State Department's Superior Honor Award for service to the country). In addition to leading over 400 investigations for the US Government and private companies of all sizes, many involving labor exploitation and other supply chain abuses, Markus is the architect on over 100 compliance programs. Markus also authored more than 100 law-related academic and popular articles and chapters and 7 books, and his legal work has been featured in outlets such as The Atlantic Monthly, CNBC, CNN, The Economist, Investor's Business Daily, The Los Angeles Times, The National Law Journal, National Geographic Channel, The New York Times, MSNBC, and The Wall Street Journal.