Pitch Engine
The Times Real Estate

.

Want to save the children? How child sexual abuse and human trafficking really work

  • Written by Alexandra Baxter, PhD Candidate in Criminology/Law, researching human trafficking and modern slavery in Australia, Flinders University
Want to save the children? How child sexual abuse and human trafficking really work Sandor Szmutko/Shutterstock

Millions of kidnapped children are imprisoned in underground tunnels, being sexually abused and tortured by a shadowy global cabal of paedophiles.

That, at least, is some of the misinformation about child sex trafficking being spread on social media. You’ll also see such ideas being promoted at protests from Los...

Read more: Want to save the children? How child sexual abuse and human trafficking really work

More Articles ...

  1. Vital Signs. The RBA wants to cut unemployment, and nothing — not even soaring home prices — will stand in its way
  2. China retaliates: suspending its Strategic Economic Dialogue with Australia is symbolic, but still a big deal
  3. Why now would be a good time for the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to publish stress test results for individual banks
  4. Applying a gender lens on the budget is not about pitting women against men
  5. NFTs hit the big league, but not everyone will win from this new sports craze
  6. The budget is a window into the treasurer's soul. Here's what to look for Tuesday night
  7. The Coalition's child-care subsidy plan: how it works, and what it means for families and the economy
  8. If we wanted to, we could stop filling shoeboxes with receipts. Here's how to simplify work-related tax deductions
  9. An extra $1.7 billion for child care will help some. It won't improve affordability for most
  10. Vital Signs: 3 economic facts point to a big-spending federal budget
  11. Exclusive. Top economists back budget push for an unemployment rate beginning with '4'
  12. Contrary to popular belief, middle-aged entrepreneurs do better
  13. Without the right financial strategies, NZ's climate change efforts will remain unfinished business
  14. Why productivity growth has stalled since 2005 (and isn't about to improve soon)
  15. Post-JobKeeper, unemployment could head north of 7%: here's why
  16. 'They track our every move': why the cards were stacked against a union at Amazon
  17. Australia's economy can withstand the proposed European Union carbon tariff — here's what we find
  18. Vital Signs: the pros and cons of diversity in organisations
  19. 8 years after the Rana Plaza tragedy, Bangladesh's garment workers are still bottom of the pile
  20. Small shareholders can be left worse off when companies raise funds. Here's how to protect them
  21. Sometimes people can do with a break: 3 ways tax debt relief rules are too tough
  22. Jobs for men have barely grown since the COVID recession. What matters now is what we do about it
  23. Financial stress in 3 graphs: there's fewer of us in it, but for those who are, it's worse
  24. COVID-19 cost more in 2020 than the world's combined natural disasters in any of the past 20 years
  25. To abandon vaccination targets is to abandon the mantle of leadership
  26. Christine Holgate's 'principal' error was applying corporate logic to Australia Post
  27. Did somebody say workers' rights? Three big questions about Menulog's employment plan
  28. With the trans-Tasman travel bubble about to open, how much should the tourism industry get its hopes up?
  29. Home prices are climbing alright, but not for the reason you might think
  30. Not wiped out. Even after the collapse of Greensill, there's time to save Whyalla
  31. Resistance to raising the minimum wage reflects obsolete economic thinking
  32. New Zealand’s new housing policy is really just a new tax package — and it’s a shambles
  33. Housing affordability is a problem. Here's why super-for-housing isn’t a solution
  34. Vital signs: to fix Australia's housing affordability crisis, negative gearing must go
  35. Company directors can't serve two masters: what went wrong at Australia Post
  36. JobKeeper and JobMaker have left too many young people on the dole queue
  37. The successor to JobKeeper can't do its job. There's an urgent need for JobMaker II
  38. The paradox of going contactless is that we're more in love with cash than ever
  39. Hostage to fortune: why Westpac could struggle to find the right buyer for its NZ subsidiary
  40. Please, no more questions about how we are going to pay off the COVID debt
  41. Curbs on press freedom come with a cost, new research reveals
  42. Is that a good egg? How chocolate makers rate on social and environmental measures
  43. Vital Signs: swaps, options and other derivatives aren't just for the financial elite
  44. A shocking statistical fact that will change the way you think about the gender pay gap
  45. Prince Harry’s critics have a point: woke capitalism is no solution
  46. Now they want to charge households for exporting solar electricity to the grid — it'll send the system backwards
  47. The true cost of the government's changes to JobSeeker is incalculable. It's as if it didn't learn from Robodebt
  48. A better deal for Uber drivers in UK, but Australia's ‘gig workers' must wait
  49. Already badly off, single parents went dramatically backwards during COVID. They are raising our future adults
  50. For many military veterans, leaving the force is the biggest battle