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5 | P a g e 13 Rights, Article 4 Chaz Maviyane‐Davies Tapestry Repro Southern Litho Services Photographers: Ian Murphy and Jane Killips Offset, 1996 / London, United Kingdom The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, was adopted by the UN General Assembly on 10 December 1948. Through its 30 articles, the international community vowed never to allow atrocities like those of World War II to happen again. This poster illustrates article 4, No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms. 14 Prostitution Trafficking Mona Mark Coalition Against Trafficking in Women United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Offset, 1995 / Designed in New York, New York / Printed in the Philippines Human trafficking and transportation of women against their will for sexual exploitation occurs everyday around the world. In many poor countries human traffickers lure young girls into the sex trade by offering them money or jobs abroad. Other times traffickers may be members of the girl's family. It's not just men who are exploiters. Women traffickers recruit uneducated girls by posing as successful business people the girls would want to emulate. Sometimes the girls are sold outright by desperately poor parents. According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM) as many as 800,000 people may be trafficked across international borders, with hundreds of thousands trafficked within the borders of their own countries. 71% of victims who are bought and sold or forced across different borders and countries are trafficked for sexual exploitation. 15 Ciudad Juárez 300 Mujeres Muertas 500 Mujeres Desaparecidad Alejandro Magallanes Digital Print, 2003 Mexico City, Mexico 300 women dead, 500 women disappeared, How many more must die before the cynical gaze of our authorities? The dead women of Juarez demand justice. 16 Femicidio! Favianna Giannoni Rodriguez Tumi's Design Graphic Communications International Union Offset, 2004 / Oakland, California Femicides [the murder of women] After the start of NAFTA on January 1, 1994, maquiladoras (manufacturing operations) spread along the U.S./Mexican border, attracting a cheap labor force, primarily young women, from throughout Mexico. Since then, there has been an epidemic of femicides (the murder of
Object Description
Exhibition | Globalize THIS! International Graphics of Resistance |
Title | Gallery Guide for "Globalize THIS! International Graphics of Resistance" |
Year | 2012 |
Decade(s) | 2010s |
Curator(s) |
Bennett, Guy Steinberg, Kerri Wells, Carol |
Description | List of 71 objects grouped by theme. |
Notes | 20 pages |
Gallery | Ben Maltz Gallery |
ImageID | Globalize_THIS_Gallery_Guide |
Collection | Ben Maltz Gallery Exhibition Archive |
Description
Title | Page 5 |
Full Text of PDF | 5 | P a g e 13 Rights, Article 4 Chaz Maviyane‐Davies Tapestry Repro Southern Litho Services Photographers: Ian Murphy and Jane Killips Offset, 1996 / London, United Kingdom The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, was adopted by the UN General Assembly on 10 December 1948. Through its 30 articles, the international community vowed never to allow atrocities like those of World War II to happen again. This poster illustrates article 4, No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms. 14 Prostitution Trafficking Mona Mark Coalition Against Trafficking in Women United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Offset, 1995 / Designed in New York, New York / Printed in the Philippines Human trafficking and transportation of women against their will for sexual exploitation occurs everyday around the world. In many poor countries human traffickers lure young girls into the sex trade by offering them money or jobs abroad. Other times traffickers may be members of the girl's family. It's not just men who are exploiters. Women traffickers recruit uneducated girls by posing as successful business people the girls would want to emulate. Sometimes the girls are sold outright by desperately poor parents. According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM) as many as 800,000 people may be trafficked across international borders, with hundreds of thousands trafficked within the borders of their own countries. 71% of victims who are bought and sold or forced across different borders and countries are trafficked for sexual exploitation. 15 Ciudad Juárez 300 Mujeres Muertas 500 Mujeres Desaparecidad Alejandro Magallanes Digital Print, 2003 Mexico City, Mexico 300 women dead, 500 women disappeared, How many more must die before the cynical gaze of our authorities? The dead women of Juarez demand justice. 16 Femicidio! Favianna Giannoni Rodriguez Tumi's Design Graphic Communications International Union Offset, 2004 / Oakland, California Femicides [the murder of women] After the start of NAFTA on January 1, 1994, maquiladoras (manufacturing operations) spread along the U.S./Mexican border, attracting a cheap labor force, primarily young women, from throughout Mexico. Since then, there has been an epidemic of femicides (the murder of |