It’s time we harnessed Big Data for good

Human trafficking suspects arrive at the criminal court in Bangkok, Thailand, November 10, 2015. Eighty-eight human trafficking suspects arrested as part of a crackdown on Thailand's lucrative smuggling and trafficking syndicates were brought before a Bangkok court on Tuesday to start examination of evidence and witnesses ahead of a trial.

Human trafficking is a $150bn global business. Only with data can we track – and disable – such a vast supply chain. Image: REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha

Bob Grove
Chief Operating Officer, Edelman APAC
Anjuli Bedi
Global Head of Behavioral Science and Psychometrics, Edelman Data & Intelligence (DxI)

Technology and data have transformed the way we live, work and play. So far, the outcomes have been mixed. While we are undoubtedly more connected and better informed, we’re simultaneously more anxious about the pace of change and our personal privacy. And rightly so. Last year’s Cambridge Analytica scandal showed us just how easily our personal data can be amassed, extracted and exploited for political gain. Looked at another way, though, technology and data have the potential, if harnessed for good, to alleviate some of the world’s most pressing global challenges - including climate change, global pandemics and human trafficking.

Data on its own is not the answer. Never in human history have we had access to so much data. The challenge is that most of it sits in silos, leaving us with an incomplete picture of complex social issues. Take human trafficking as an example. Around 172 countries form part of the chain of exploitation, while more than 40 million people are enslaved per year. It’s a daunting picture. The only way to drill down into what’s really going on, and to develop intervention strategies, is for data to be shared.

Have you read?

Let’s see what happens when two quite simple principles – harnessing data for good and data-sharing – are put into action to tackle human trafficking.

Human trafficking is a $150 billion global business hiding in plain sight. Very few of us are aware of the statistics, to say nothing of the fact that it’s likely happening right in our own backyards. And until recently, it was next to impossible to track and assess the entire trafficking supply chain – from the financing to the brokers to the victims and the buyers. Data-sharing has upended all of this.

For the past 13 years, Stop the Traffik, a non-profit, has used the power of people and technology to combat human trafficking. It recently asked the Edelman Predictive Intelligence Centre, a team of data and behavioural scientists focused on leveraging Artificial Intelligence (AI) for marketing and communications, to come on board. We’ve built the organization a human-trafficking prevention model that relies on data-sharing between numerous sources, particularly non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and financial institutions, alongside crowdsourced and open-sourced data. IBM’s data hub and visualization platform consolidates the intelligence and produces insights about illicit trafficking operations such as market supply and demand, trafficking routes and financial flows.

Indramayu is a fishing village in Java with a high rate of trafficking victims taken from Indramayu to other destinations, such as Bali and Saudi Arabia.
Indramayu is a fishing village in Java with a high rate of trafficking victims taken from Indramayu to other destinations, such as Bali and Saudi Arabia. Image: Edelman

It’s impossible to overstate the pivotal role NGOs play in the trafficking prevention supply chain. They’re the only source with enough detail about specific cases to be able to establish specifics like the price a person is sold for, and where and through whom recruitment is conducted. From this, we can decipher which technology platforms are being used for victim recruitment, which ports victims are transferred through, and even which airlines they are transported on. Armed with this data, machine-learning techniques are applied to aggregate case data. We gather intel from different NGOs, open-source news articles, court cases and crowd-sourced data through Stop the Traffik’s STOP APP, a phone application allowing anyone to submit suspicious activity anonymously and securely.

In aggregate, the data allows us to identify trafficking hotspots and patterns, which are then shared with stakeholders that have been flagged as having links to trafficking-related activities. For example, if our findings identify a particular airline route with a high rate of child trafficking victims, the airline can respond along that specific route right away, and immediate measures can be taken to engage law enforcement before the victim reaches the designated destination.

A route map showing human trafficking hotspots in South-East Asia.
A route map showing human trafficking hotspots in South-East Asia. Image: Edelman

Likewise, banks can be alerted when suspicious activity is flagged up by the data. On their own, financial institutions struggle to identify and disrupt trafficking-related transactions because their data models cannot distinguish money-laundering transactions from trafficking ones. Fortunately, together with data sharing, this all becomes possible. Financial data can be combined with existing NGO and open-source data to identify specific signs of trafficking and the risk level of particular transactions and accounts. With these results, banks can now validate and improve their machine-learning models and educate staff to better identify trafficking-related transactions. They can also train front line staff to identify trafficking brokers, which can ultimately freeze financial flows of all the intermediaries involved in the trafficking supply chain.

There are undoubtedly malign forces at play in the world of Big Data. All too often our personal data is being manipulated for financial or political gain. It’s no wonder we feel threatened, vulnerable and powerless when it comes to our own data. But what about those who are powerless to begin with? Shockingly, for every 10,000 people in the world, nearly 54 of those individuals are victims of modern slavery, with a quarter being children. Not only do the victims have no rights, but they’re walking among us and living in our communities, and yet we’re largely unaware. Indeed, the trafficking industry has thrived in part because there is no central intelligence hub. This is precisely why we need to harness data for good – because through data sharing, we can work to eradicate one of the most longstanding, evil and unjust social issues of our time.

Don't miss any update on this topic

Create a free account and access your personalized content collection with our latest publications and analyses.

Sign up for free

License and Republishing

World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License, and in accordance with our Terms of Use.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

Stay up to date:

Data Science

Share:
The Big Picture
Explore and monitor how Data Science is affecting economies, industries and global issues
World Economic Forum logo

Forum Stories newsletter

Bringing you weekly curated insights and analysis on the global issues that matter.

Subscribe today

About us

Engage with us

  • Sign in
  • Partner with us
  • Become a member
  • Sign up for our press releases
  • Subscribe to our newsletters
  • Contact us

Quick links

Language editions

Privacy Policy & Terms of Service

Sitemap

© 2024 World Economic Forum