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The Storm Makers: Lesson Plan: Why Is It Illegal to Sell People?: Examining Human Rights and Modern Slavery

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OVERVIEW

We sell nearly everything: property, labor, commodities, predictions for future stock prices, ideas and more. And in the not-so-distant past, it was legal in the United States to sell humans as slaves, too. So why do we now think it is inhumane to sell people? How do current practices compare with the slave trade common in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries? And what happens when, despite the law, people are traded as merchandise? This lesson plan uses the documentary film The Storm Makers to provide students with an opportunity to reflect on the causes and consequences of human trafficking.

Featuring brutally candid testimony, The Storm Makers is a chilling exposé of Cambodia's human trafficking underworld and an eye-opening look at the complex cycle of poverty, despair and greed that fuels this brutal modern slave trade. More than half a million Cambodians work abroad and a staggering third of these have been sold as slaves. Most are young women, held prisoner and forced to work in horrific conditions, sometimes as prostitutes, in Malaysia, Thailand and Taiwan.

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OBJECTIVES

By the end of this lesson, students will:

GRADE LEVELS: 11-12, college

SUBJECT AREAS

Ethics, Global Studies: Cambodia, U.S. History: Slavery, Women's Studies

  1. Compare and contrast the causes and consequences of modern-day human trafficking in East Asia with the slave trade that shaped early America.
  2. Explain why we outlaw human trafficking, including a discussion of the concept of human rights, as well as the personal and societal consequences of the practice.

3. Show and Discuss Clips

Show all of the film clips in order. Pause briefly (as time allows) to share student reactions to what they see. Record the main points, key words and concepts brought up in your discussion by asking students to take notes individually and/or taking notes on a white board, poster board or other medium visible to all at the front of the class.

Possible Discussion Topics

Before introducing your own questions, solicit student responses. If the discussion doesn't touch on everything you want to cover, you might also ask some of these questions:

Clip 1: "Background"

Clip 2: "The Trafficker"

Clip 3: "Aya Tells Her Story"

Clip 4: "Aya's Father"

Clip 5: "Aya and Her Mother: The Argument"

Clip 6: "Aya and Her Son"

4. Write

Assign students to write essays on one of the two topics in the second step of the activity. To scaffold the task, you might want to assign them to address specific issues in their essays. (Depending on the topic, this may require outside research, either in class or as homework). Examples could include: How did economic insecurity contribute to the events seen in the clips? What current law governs human trafficking and what is the basis for that law? What specific arguments do human rights organizations make against human trafficking? What are some of the root causes of human trafficking, and what preventative measures could be taken?

EXTENSIONS

  1. Find organizations in your community working to combat human trafficking. Investigate opportunities for interested students to get involved.
  2. Investigate incidences of human trafficking in the United States and compare them with the events in the film.
  3. Have students research Cambodia's history (the Khmer Rouge regime), culture, poverty rates/economy and gender roles/attitudes and then draw conclusions about which factors may contribute to human trafficking. Then have students conduct the same research in the United States and compare and contrast their findings.
  4. Ask students to write essays explaining the significance of the film's title, The Storm Makers. What is the relationship between those who demand slavery, those who facilitate the supply for it and those who are victims of it? What makes traffickers and recruiters "storm makers," and what impact do they have on an individual, community and global scale? What attitudes, actions, reactions and circumstances bring "storm makers" to exploit and oppress other human beings?

RESOURCES

The Film

The Storm Makers

You can find links to additional resources at the film's websites: http://www.tipasaproduction.com/thestormmakers/en/
and
www.pbs.org/pov/thestormmakers
The POV site includes a general discussion guide with additional activity ideas.

POV: Media Literacy Questions for Analyzing POV Films
http://www.pbs.org/pov/blog/povdocs/2015/11/media-literacy/
This list of questions provides a useful starting point for leading rich discussions that challenge students to think critically about documentaries.

Human Trafficking

Frederick Douglass Family Initiatives
http://www.fdfi.org/
Frederick Douglass Family Initiatives is an abolitionist organization whose founders are direct descendants of Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington. It creates curriculum and brings human trafficking prevention education into secondary schools throughout the United States.

United Nations Action for Cooperation Against Trafficking in Persons: "Cambodia" and "Tools and Guidelines"
Cambodia: http://un-act.org/countries/cambodia/
Tools and Guidelines: http://un-act.org/background/tools-guidelines/
The United Nations Action for Cooperation against Trafficking in Persons was established in 2014 to ensure a coordinated approach to combatting trafficking in persons in the greater Mekong subregion and beyond.

United Nations Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking: "Counter-Trafficking Action Being Taken in Cambodia"
www.no-trafficking.org/cambodia_action.html
This page provides specific information on Cambodia, including links to relevant Cambodian laws and the nation's 2012 National Plan of Action on Trafficking in Persons and Sexual Exploitation. For more general information, including legal definitions, see the Human Trafficking page on the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime website: www.unodc.org/unodc/en/human-trafficking/what-is-human-trafficking.html

U.S. Department of State: "Trafficking in Persons Report 2014"
http://www.state.gov/j/tip/rls/tiprpt/2014/
Each year the U.S. Department of State releases a report on human trafficking. This link is to the 2014 report. Of special interest is the section of the report on Cambodia: www.state.gov/j/tip/rls/tiprpt/countries/2014/226693.htm

Cambodia

Cambodian Information Center
www.cambodia.org
This unofficial site aggregates links to a wide range of content related to Cambodia.

The Royal Embassy of Cambodia
www.embassyofcambodia.org/links.html
The website of the Cambodian embassy in Washington, D.C. offers official Cambodian government perspectives and links to government agencies, media outlets and more.

STANDARDS

Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects (http://www.corestandards.org/assets/CCSSI_ELA%20Standards.pdf)

11-12.1 Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or texts, using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence.

W.11-12.2d Use precise language, domain-specific vocabulary and techniques such as metaphor, simile and analogy to manage the complexity of the topic.

11-12.4 Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization and style are appropriate to task, purpose and audience.

Content Knowledge: (http://www.mcrel.org/standards-benchmarks/) a compilation of content standards and benchmarks for K-12 curriculum by McREL (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning).

Language Arts, Standard 1: Uses the general skills and strategies of the writing process.

Language Arts, Standard 2: Uses the stylistic and rhetorical aspects of writing.

Language Arts, Standard 8: Uses listening and speaking strategies for different puroses.

Language Arts, Standard 9: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media.

U.S. History, Standard 31: Understands economic, social and cultural developments in the contemporary United States.

CREDITS

Thanks to those who reviewed this lesson plan:

Robert J. Benz, Founder and Executive Vice President, Frederick Douglass Family Initiatives

Erika Howard, Founder, Docwomen

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