Not A Commodity | China

Not A Commodity
Human trafficking will organs of the body as a a commodity, in the form of commodity price to sell, and around the world in a different and sell a currency, not a commodity posters will be human organs in the body currencies symbols on the price, in order to show the idea is not correct, this illegal activity against human trafficking.

The Organs are Gone | China

Surgical scars left by the removal of human organs are displayed on the human body, with shocking wounds to appeal to people against human trafficking and against organ trafficking.The Organs are Gone replace The stitches of The surgical scar with The English word of each organ, leaving only The scar and The name where The or

Silenced | United States

This poster was inspired from my research about Human Trafficking. I was fascinated with the ideas of bar codes but I also wanted to make it a little bit different. Which is why I choose to make the bar code dripping. The phrase I had used came from the song that was given in the competition and I believe the words go nicely with the image. I apologize if my poster seems too simple but I think this shows my style the best and I like it for how it turned out.

Mankind | India

I started off my research by watching ted talks of victims speak about their exploitation. There was a common thread highlighted by many of them; society thinks of human trafficking as a very remote and outlying subject. Images of hands being tied and mouths being shut are associated with the word ‘human trafficking’, whereas in reality, victims are people just like you and me. They are in houses you walk by or in stores you buy your clothes from. Survivors are socially excluded and labelled which forces them to relapse.

Credit: Wade Hudson is a talented Jamaican-born, Toronto-based photographer. Renowned for his striking work across portraiture, beauty and lifestyle, highlighting the best sides of everyday people. His projects named, Jamaica and Pickney (children) are used in the posters.