Deoria, India, August 2018. A bungalow which served as an old age facility and orphanage for girls living with mental disabilities was investigated for allegations of forced sexual exploitation of residents by shelter staff. Photo Credit: Deepak Gupta/Hindustan. Getty Images.
Global Slavery Index / Spotlight

Orphanages as modern slavery hubs

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Despite overwhelming evidence cataloguing the harms of institutional care for children, an estimated 5.4 million children worldwide live in orphanages and other institutions.1 While many assume that orphanages are home to children who have no living parents, research consistently demonstrates that this is not the case for over 80 per cent of children living in orphanages globally.2 In many countries, only a small proportion of children’s institutions are registered with the government, which leaves many children invisible to necessary oversight and protections, and hinders data collection efforts.3 The institutionalised population, including children in orphanages, are underrepresented in the prevalence estimates within this Global Slavery Index for this reason.

While the case for global care reform is not new, more recent evidence from governments and civil society organisations highlights the multifaceted relationship between children’s institutions and human trafficking — revealing a complex web of factors that position orphanages as both a driver and an outcome of exploitation.4 In 2019, the links between institutions and child trafficking were recognised by the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA). For the first time, member states collectively expressed their concern over the harm that institutions can cause to children and called for them to be progressively phased out. In its historic Resolution on the Rights of the Child, the UNGA set out the political and human rights case for transforming care systems and made some ground-breaking recommendations. Governments and civil society now have an opportunity to implement these recommendations.

Trafficking into orphanages

Child trafficking into institutions, also referred to as orphanage trafficking, is described as “the recruitment of children into residential care institutions for the purpose of profit and exploitation.”6 This practice is linked to the funding of orphanages through private donations, volunteer tourism, mission trips, and other forms of fundraising.7 It is estimated that US Christian organisations alone donate approximately US$3.3 billion to residential care each year.8 The popular practice of orphanage volunteering — people from high-income countries traveling abroad to help children living in orphanages — also serves to provide a continual income for the orphanage, as well as reduced labour costs for the care of the children.9 However, there is a grim downside to all of this.

Although often well-intentioned, these sources of financial and in-kind support undermine national efforts to support broader child protection and social welfare systems by creating a parallel system without official oversight and accountability. They also create a marketplace that can incentivise the expansion of existing orphanages and the establishment of new ones, with the supply of funding and resources into orphanages increasing the demand for children to be in them.10 There is evidence of children being deliberately recruited from vulnerable families to fill spaces in orphanages, under the guise of better care and access to education.11 Once trafficked into orphanages, children are vulnerable to neglect, abuse, and exploitation. Orphanages that are run for profit have been found to operate under extremely poor conditions to drive down care costs, with evidence also pointing to children being kept deliberately malnourished to encourage further donations,12 forced to interact with and perform for visitors, or forced to beg for financial donations.13

The popularity of orphanage “volunteering” has seen a rise in orphanages built in tourist hotspots to fulfil demand and capitalise on the financial potential.14 In Cambodia, for example, there was a 75 per cent increase in the number of residential care institutions in a five-year period, despite no correlating increase in the number of children losing both parents.15 In Uganda, the number of children in institutions increased from just over one thousand in the late 1990s to 55,000 in 2018, despite large decreases in the number of orphans.16 The presence of volunteers also places children at increased risk of sexual abuse. There have been numerous documented cases of perpetrators posing as well-intentioned orphanage volunteers to gain access to vulnerable children, taking advantage of often unregulated, unvetted, and unsupervised access.17

Trafficking out of orphanages

Traffickers and organised criminal groups are known to target institutions where they can exploit weak or absent child protection mechanisms.21 Evidence shows children in orphanages are groomed, coerced, and deceived into leaving facilities and are trafficked into sexual exploitation, forced labour, forced criminality, and other forms of modern slavery.22 In some cases, orphanages have been complicit or directly involved in the trafficking and exploitation of children within their care.23

Demand for adoption among childless families — often from high-income countries — also drives trafficking and kidnapping of children into and out of orphanages. 24 This is particularly evident in countries where private and international adoptions are common, for example in China, where it is estimated that more than 200,000 children are sold for the purposes of international adoptions per year.25 In Nigeria, some orphanages have been linked to “baby factories,” where traffickers hold women against their will, rape them, and force them to carry and deliver a child for the purpose of selling.26

Child survivors of modern slavery and unaccompanied migrant children being placed in orphanages

Children who have been trafficked are often placed in institutions, either as a mechanism intended to provide them with protection and support or as a law enforcement response because the child is not being treated as a victim of crime. Government responses fall short of providing child-centric safeguards; for example, only 55 per cent of governments assessed in the Global Slavery Index were found to have special support for child victims of modern slavery. In some cases, children identified as victims are returned to the same institutions from which they were trafficked and are re-exposed to the risks that led to their initial exploitation.27

Without the protection provided by parents and guardians, unaccompanied migrant and refugee children are at greater risk of trafficking and exploitation, both in transit and on arrival in their destination country.28 Often, these children are either placed in reception facilities akin to orphanages or they enter the institutional care system.29 The institutionalisation of trafficked children and unaccompanied migrant and refugee children increases their vulnerability to exploitation on account of entering a high-risk and insecure system.30

Modern slavery risks experienced by care leavers

Children who have grown up in institutional settings are more vulnerable to trafficking and exploitation once they have aged out of the system or if they have run away from the facilities.31 This is linked to the impact of having had fewer opportunities to develop the social skills and networks needed to live successfully and independently in the community.32

This vulnerability is increased where there are limited services and support available for reintegration into society.33 Further, care leavers are particularly vulnerable to sexual exploitation. Girls in Moldova who grew up in institutions, for example, were found to be 10 times more likely to be trafficked for sexual exploitation than their peers raised in families.34 International analysis highlights similar disadvantages among care leaver populations globally, including higher rates of homelessness, unemployment, isolation, poverty, and mental health issues compared to peers raised in families.35

Globally, orphanages and other institutional settings for children are hubs where child exploitation and modern slavery can thrive, as they are often hidden from official oversight, operate with weak child protection systems, attract a continuous flow of large and unmonitored donations, and are home to children who are already vulnerable. Addressing this requires a multi-faceted response.

Recommendations for governments

  1. Recognise the link between children in orphanages and modern slavery. Orphanage trafficking must be criminalised and children in these settings recognised and responded to as being highly vulnerable to exploitation.

  2. Curb the proliferation of orphanages by prioritising family and community-based care in all policies relating to the care and protection of children. This includes ensuring adequate funding for family and community services and prioritising long-term, sustainable solutions that enable families and communities to thrive together.

  3. Focus international aid on family and community strengthening initiatives, as opposed to being directed towards institutional care for children.

  4. Monitor international donations and raise awareness among philanthropic communities of potential risks of funding orphanages.

Endnotes

1Desmond. C., et al. 2020, Prevalence and number of children living in institutional care: global, regional, and country estimates. Lancet Child Adolescent Health. 4(5): 370-377. Available from: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanchi/article/PIIS2352-4642(20)30022-5/fulltext [1 September 2021].
2As above.
3Lumos Foundation 2021, Cycles of Exploitation. Available from: https://lumos.contentfiles.net/media/documents/document/2021/12/LUMOS_Cycles_of_exploitation.pdf. [10 January 2022].
4As above.
5European Commission 2009, Report of the Ad Hoc Expert Group on the Transition from Institutional to Community-based Care, pp. 8-9. Available from: https://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?langId=en&catId=89&newsId=614&furtherNews=yes#:~:text=On%2023%20September%202009%2C%20a,care%20reform%20in%20their%20complexity. [10 February 2022].
6Van Doore, K. 2016, Paper Orphans: Exploring Child Trafficking for the Purpose of Orphanages. International Journal of Childrens Rights. 24. Available from: https://research-repository.griffith.edu.au/handle/10072/99655. [1 February 2022].
7Van Doore, K. 2019, ‘Orphanages as Sites of Modern Slavery’, in Cheer, J.M. et al. (eds) Modern Day Slavery and Orphanage Tourism, CABI.
8Faith To Action Initiative 2021, Residential Care: U.S. Christian Giving and Missions. Available from: https://www.faithtoaction.org/barnastudy2021/. [1 February 2022].
9Van Doore, K. 2019, ‘Orphanages as Sites of Modern Slavery, in Cheer, J.M. et al. (eds), Modern Day Slavery and Orphanage Tourism, CABI.
10Lumos Foundation 2021, Cycles of Exploitation. Available from: https://lumos.contentfiles.net/media/documents/document/2021/12/LUMOS_Cycles_of_exploitation.pdf. [10 January 2022].
11Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons 2018, Trafficking in Persons report, United States Department of State. Available from: https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/282798.pdf. [14 March 2023].
12Lumos 2016, Orphanage Entrepreneurs: The Trafficking of Haitis Invisible Children. Available from: https://lumos.contentfiles.net/media/documents/document/2017/12/Haiti_Trafficking_Report_ENG_WEB_NOV16.pdf. [1 February 2022].
13Van Doore, K. 2019, ‘Orphanages as Sites of Modern Slavery’, in Cheer, J.M. et al. (eds), Modern Day Slavery and Orphanage Tourism, CABI.
14Lumos Foundation 2021, Cycles of Exploitation. Available from: https://lumos.contentfiles.net/media/documents/document/2021/12/LUMOS_Cycles_of_exploitation.pdf. [10 January 2022].
15Cambodia Ministry of Social Affairs 2017, Veterans and Youth Rehabilitation. Mapping of Residential Care Facilities in the Capital and 24 Provinces of the Kingdom of Cambodia. Available from: https://www.unicef.org/cambodia/media/1331/file/Residential%20care%20facilities%20in%20Cambodia%20Report%20English.pdf. [21 February 2022].
16Better Care Network 2018, How orphanages in Uganda profit from childrens misery. Available from: https://bettercarenetwork.org/sites/default/files/How%20orphanages%20in%20Uganda%20profit%20from%20children%27s%20misery%20Nianias.pdf. [23 February 2022].
17Van Doore, K, Martin, F, & McKeon, A 2016, Expert Paper: International Volunteering and Child Sexual Abuse, Better Care Network. Available from: https://bettercarenetwork.org/bcn-in-action/key-initiatives/rethink-orphanages/resources/expert-paper-international-volunteering-and-child-sexual-abuse. [20 December 2022]. 
18Modern Slavery Act, 2018 (Australia Cmlth)
19Australian Border Force n.d., Commonwealth Modern Slavery Act 2018: Guidance for Reporting Entities, pp. 33-34. Available from: https://www.homeaffairs.gov.au/criminal-justice/files/modern-slavery-reporting-entities.pdf. [27 February 2022].
20ReThink Orphanages Australia 2021, Partnerships with Overseas Orphanages: Implications of the Modern Slavery Act 2018. Available from: https://au.rethinkorphanages.org/sites/default/files/2020-02/partnerships-with-overseas-orphanages%20%281%29.pdf. [1 December 2021].
21Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons 2019, Trafficking in Persons report, United States Department of State. Available from: https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/2019-Trafficking-in-Persons-Report.pdf. [14 March 2023].
22Lumos Foundation 2020, Cracks in the system: Child trafficking in the context of institutional care in Europe. Available from: https://www.wearelumos.org/resources/cracks-system/#:~:text=Cracks%20in%20the%20System%20is,and%20child%20trafficking%20in%20Europe.&text=Despite%20this%2C%20laws%20and%20policies,child%20institutionalisation%20and%20child%20trafficking. [1 February 2022].
23Lumos Foundation 2020, Cracks in the system: Child trafficking in the context of institutional care in Europe. Available from: https://www.wearelumos.org/resources/cracks-system/#:~:text=Cracks%20in%20the%20System%20is,and%20child%20trafficking%20in%20Europe.&text=Despite%20this%2C%20laws%20and%20policies,child%20institutionalisation%20and%20child%20trafficking [1 February 2022].
24Van Doore, K 2016, ‘Paper Orphans: Exploring Child Trafficking for the Purpose of Orphanages,’ International Journal of Childrens Rights. Available from: https://research-repository.griffith.edu.au/handle/10072/99655. [1 February 2022].
25Zheng, T. 2018, Human Trafficking in China. Journal of Historical Archelogy and Anthropological Sciences. Available from: http://medcraveonline.com/JHAAS/JHAAS-03-00080.pdf. [10 February 2022].
26Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons 2021, Trafficking in Persons Report, United States Department of State, p. 256. Available from: https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/TIPR-GPA-upload-07222021.pdf. [10 July 2022].
27Lumos Foundation 2021, Cycles of Exploitation. Available from: https://lumos.contentfiles.net/media/documents/document/2021/12/LUMOS_Cycles_of_exploitation.pdf. [10 January 2022].
28David, F et al. 2019, Migrants and their vulnerability to human trafficking, modern slavery and forced labour. Available from: https://publications.iom.int/system/files/pdf/migrants_and_their_vulnerability.pdf. [1 February 2022].
29Lumos Foundation 2021, Cycles of Exploitation. Available from: https://lumos.contentfiles.net/media/documents/document/2021/12/LUMOS_Cycles_of_exploitation.pdf. [10 January 2022].
30As above.
31As above.
32EveryChild 2011, Scaling Down: Reducing, Reshaping and Improving Residential Care Around the World. Available from: https://bettercarenetwork.org/library/principles-of-good-care-practices/transforming-institutional-care/scaling-down-reducing-reshaping-and-improving-residential-care-around-the-world. [18 February 2022].
33Lumos Foundation 2021, Cycles of Exploitation. Available from: https://lumos.contentfiles.net/media/documents/document/2021/12/LUMOS_Cycles_of_exploitation.pdf. [10 January 2022].
34IOM 2007, Protecting Vulnerable Children in Moldova. Available from: http://www.iom. md/materials/brochures/4_protecting_vuln_children.pdf. [18 February 2022].
35Strahla, B, Bredab, ADPv, Mann-Federc, V & Schröer, W 2020, ‘A multinational comparison of care-leaving policy and legislation’, Journal of International and Comparative Social Policy, vol. 1, no. 16. Available from: https://bettercarenetwork.org/sites/default/files/2020-11/div-class-title-a-multinational-comparison-of-care-leaving-policy-and-legislation-div.pdf. [1 December 2021]; All Party Parliamentary Group for Preventing Homelessness 2017, Available from: https://www.crisis.org.uk/media/237534/appg_for_ending_homelessness_report_2017_pdf.pdf. [12 May 2022].
36Unwin, J, Hillis, S, Cluver, L, Flaxman, S, Goldman, P, Butchart, A, Bachman, G, Rawlings, L, Donnelly, C, Ratmann, O, Green, P, Nelson, C, Blenkinsop, A, Bhatt, S, Desmond, C, Villaveces, A & Sherr, L. 2022, ‘Global, regional, and national minimum estimates of children affected by COVID-19-associated orphanhood and caregiver death, by age and family circumstance up to Oct 31, 2021: an updated modelling study’, The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, vol. 6, no. 4. Available from: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanchi/article/PIIS2352-4642(22)00005-0/fulltext. [1 December 2022].
37Better Care Network et al. 2020, Protection of Children During the Covid-19 Pandemic: Children and Alternative Care. Available from: https://bettercarenetwork.org/sites/default/files/2020-04/COVID-19AlternativeCareTechnicalNote.pdf. [25 March 2022].
38Punaks, M and Lama, S 2020, Orphanage Trafficking and Child Protection in Emergencies in Nepal: A Comparative Analysis of the 2015 Earthquake and the 2020 COVID-19 Pandemic. Available from: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2349300320975547 [25 March 2022]; Child Rights International Network 2020, Children in Out-of-Home Care: Lessons from the Pandemic. Available from: https://home.crin.org/readlistenwatch/stories/children-in-out-of-home-care-lessons-from-the-pandemic. [2 January 2022].
39Punaks, M and Lama, S 2020, Orphanage Trafficking and Child Protection in Emergencies in Nepal: A Comparative Analysis of the 2015 Earthquake and the 2020 COVID-19 Pandemic. Available from:https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2349300320975547 [25 March 2022].
40Punaks, M and Lama, S 2020, Orphanage Trafficking and Child Protection in Emergencies in Nepal: A Comparative Analysis of the 2015 Earthquake and the 2020 COVID-19 Pandemic. Available from:https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2349300320975547 [25 March 2022].
41Goldman, P, van-Ijzendoorn, M & Sonuga-Barke, E 2020, ‘The implications of COVID-19 for the care of children living in residential institutions’, The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, vol. 4, no. 6. Available from: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanchi/article/PIIS2352-4642(20)30130-9/fulltext. [1 April 2022].
42Child Rights International Network 2020, Children in Out-of-Home Care: Lessons from the Pandemic. Available from: https://home.crin.org/readlistenwatch/stories/children-in-out-of-home-care-lessons-from-the-pandemic. [2 January 2022].
43Punaks, M & Lama, S 2020, Orphanage Trafficking and Child Protection in Emergencies in Nepal: A Comparative Analysis of the 2015 Earthquake and the 2020 COVID-19 Pandemic. Available from: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2349300320975547 [25 March 2022].
44Nhep, R & Van-Doore, K 2021, Impact of COVID-19 on Privately Run Residential Care Institutions: Insights and Implications for Advocacy and Awareness Raising. Available from: https://bettercarenetwork.org/sites/default/files/2021-06/Impact%20of%20COVID-19.pdf. [3 April 2022].
45Kolm, SC et al. (eds), Handbook of the Economics of Giving, Altruism and Reciprocity. Available from: https://www.sciencedirect.com/handbook/handbook-of-the-economics-of-giving-altruism-and-reciprocity/vol/2/suppl/C. [6 April 2022].
46Better Care Network 2015, Better Volunteering, Better Care Initiative Response to Earthquake in Nepal. Available from: www.bettercarenetwork.org/news-updates/news/better-volunteering-better-care-initiative-response-to-earthquake-in-nepal. [6 April 2022].
47Manandhar, R 2016, Many Dolakha Children Missing After Earthquake. Available from: http://kathmandupost.ekantipur.com/news/2016-01-27/many-dolakha-children-missing-after-earthquake.htm. [6 April 2022].
48Lumos 2017, Funding Haitian Orphanages at the Cost of Childrens Rights. Available from: https://www.wearelumos.org/resources/funding-haitian-orphanagescost-childrens-rights/. [6 April 2022].
49Save the Children (n.d.), Indonesian orphans on the increase as Tsunami pushes parents into poverty and children in institutions. Available from: http://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/A33B5EE2179FE21FC1257230004FC11A-sc-idn-27nov.pdf. [6 April 2022].
50Lumos 2022, Lumos urges hault to military action to protect children. Available from: https://www.wearelumos.org/news-and-media/2022/02/23/ukraine-lumos-statement/. [28 December 2022].
51France24 2022, ‘Fleeing war, Ukraine’s orphans face trafficking threat’, 14 April 2022. Available from: https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20220414-fleeing-war-ukraine-s-orphans-face-trafficking-threat. [16 April 2022].
52France24 2022, ‘UN warns against adoption of Ukrainian children in Russia’, 14 June 2022. Available from: https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20220614-un-warns-against-adoption-of-ukrainian-children-in-russia. [20 June 2022].
53Koshiw, I 2023, ‘Putin’s alleged war crimes: who are the Ukrainian children being taken by Russia?’ 17 March 2023, The Guardian. Available from: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/mar/17/vladimir-putin-war-crimes-icc-arrest-warrant-ukraine-children. [4 April 2023].
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