Project Resource

Experimental Interventions Using Mass Media to Change Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices Around Vulnerability to Forced Labor in Hong Kong

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Country
Release Year
2020
Document Type
REPORT

This report presents research on migrant domestic workers’ (MDW) vulnerability to forced labor in Hong Kong, and examines whether awareness campaigns can be used to shift attitudes and behaviors around forced labor. It presents data from a randomized control trial (RCT) that measures the impact of awareness campaigns on knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) regarding forced labor and human trafficking among two populations in Hong Kong: the general public (GP), and MDWs from Indonesia, The Philippines, and Nepal working in Hong Kong.

Project Topics
Forced labor
Migration
Working conditions
Trafficking in persons (human trafficking)
LABOR ISSUES
VULNERABILITIES TO LABOR EXPLOITATION
Economic Sector

There are no Economic Sectors currently associated with this Project Resource.

Intervention Type
Research
Awareness-raising
Goods

There are no Goods currently associated with this Project Resource.

Project
Reducing Vulnerability to Human Trafficking: An Experimental Intervention Using Anti-Trafficking Campaigns to Change Knowledge, Attitudes, Beliefs, and Practices in Nepal
Grantee
UC Berkeley
Author
Margaret Boittin (York University), Biz Herman (University of California, Berkeley), Sarah Rich-Zendel (York University), Soo Sun You (University of California, Berkeley)
Language
English
Accessibility

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