Brad Myles, Polaris | AWS Imagine Nonprofit 2019
Brad Myles, CEO of Polaris talks with Jeff Frick at AWS Imagine Nonprofit 2019 from Seattle, WA. #ImagineABetterWorld #AWS #theCUBE @SiliconANGLE theCUBE https://siliconangle.com/2019/08/20/north-star-of-freedom-how-polaris-leverages-business-and-data-to-combat-human-trafficking-imagineabetterworld-guestoftheweek/ North Star of freedom: How Polaris leverages business and data to combat human trafficking Since human trafficking today has become a $150-billion major enterprise, why not fight one big business with another? This is the strategy that the nonprofit Polaris Project has put in place to combat human trafficking by serving victims with a national hotline, a massive data set, and enlisting the support of large corporations to be on the alert for situations that just don’t look quite right. “A group of small nonprofits and cops are not going to solve it on their own,” said Brad Myles (pictured), executive director and chief executive officer of Polaris Project. “Big businesses have the resources; they have the brand; they have the customer base; they have the scale. We need big businesses to enter the fight.” Myles spoke with Jeff Frick, host of theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Media’s mobile livestreaming studio, during the AWS Imagine event in Seattle Washington. They discussed the value of data gathered through calls to the group’s national hotline, how it has identified specific jobs prone to exploitation by traffickers, leveraging its business partnerships to support victims and balancing short-term action with the long-term view of a difficult problem (see the full interview with transcript here). This week, theCUBE features Brad Myles as its Guest of the Week. Over 40 million victims Now in its 17th year, Polaris was founded by two senior students at Brown University who were moved by the disturbing conditions discovered at a brothel located near the campus in Providence, Rhode Island. Named for the North Star, used by people held in slavery within the United States as a guide toward freedom, the organization has grown to become one of the largest anti-trafficking nonprofits in the U.S. and Japan. The fight against human trafficking is a big job. The International Labor Organization estimates there are over 40 million victims of human trafficking globally and at least a quarter of them are children. “We both combat the issue and try to get to long-term solutions,” Myles said. “It’s part big data and long-term solutions and part responding to cases that break across the country every day.” To keep track of those cases, Polaris staffs a 24/7 National Human Trafficking Hotline to gather information on potential issues. The hotline receives an average of 90 calls per day, and over 40,000 cases of human trafficking have been reported over the past 10 years. “The hotline depends on either survivors calling in as a lifeline or community members calling in who saw something suspicious,” Myles said. “We get calls from people who are getting their nails done and the woman was crying and talking about how she’s not getting paid.” 25 job categories Those calls into the Polaris hotline represented a gold mine of data. In 2017, the organization conducted a major in-depth study of the information it had gathered and came to a startling conclusion: It could classify nearly every call into 25 categories of jobs that defined the essence of modern slavery. These positions ranged from illicit massage to health and beauty occupations to work in restaurants, hotels, and commercial cleaning services. “We’re coming up with red flag indicators for each of the 25 types,” Myles explained. “We can get smarter about where victims are recruited from, we can get smarter about intervention points, and we can get smarter about where survivors might have a moment to get help and get out.” One of the categories that Polaris identified was “traveling sales crews.” These are often teams of young people recruited to go door-to-door in specific areas selling magazine subscriptions or other items. The recruitment and coercion of youth to sell magazines has been well-documented in recent years by Ian Urbina, an investigative reporter for The New York Times. Urbina’s research and subsequent stories by others have documented the violent nature among many of these crews, which move rapidly about the country and will often leave underperforming kids stranded. “These predatory groups decided to prey on disaffected U.S. citizen youth that are bored or working a low-wage job,” Myles said. “A lot of people when they think of human trafficking are not thinking of U.S. citizen kids knocking on your door.” ...