Icon of GlobeLL.M./J.S.D. Program in Intercultural Human Rights Learn More

2021 HUMAN TRAFFICKING ACADEMY

INSTRUCTORS

Assessing Human Trafficking through the Lens of Health Care:

Examinations in Health and Law. Healing with Integral Development.

Director of the Human Trafficking Academy

Prof. Dr. Roza Pati

Founder & Director, The John J. Brunetti Human Trafficking Academy
Professor of Law & Executive Director
LL.M./ J.S.D. Program in Intercultural Human Rights
St. Thomas University College of Law, Miami, FL
Member, Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, The Vatican

Team of Instructors

Sarah L. Bessell, Esq.
Deputy Director
Human Trafficking Legal Center
Washington, DC
Sarah L. Bessell, Esq.

Deputy Director
Human Trafficking Legal Center
Washington, DC

Sarah L. Bessell is the Deputy Director at the Human Trafficking Legal Center, where she provides training and technical assistance for immigration and civil human trafficking cases. Bessell also conducts research on accountability for human trafficking victims and has authored publications on the intersection between human trafficking and corruption, diplomatic immunity, persons with disabilities, and domestic violence. Bessell manages the Human Trafficking Legal Center’s international strategic litigation program. Bessell has a background in international human rights and conflict prevention. She spent time in Cambodia, where she worked in the Office of the International Co-Prosecutor of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal. Prior to this, she worked on international conflict resolution issues at the University for Peace in Ethiopia and at the U.S. Institute of Peace.

Bessell holds a J.D. from the George Washington University Law School and an M.A. (Conflict Resolution) from Georgetown University. Bessell is admitted to practice in New York and the District of Columbia.

Prof. Panagiota V. Caralis, MD, JD, FACP
Medical Director, THRIVE Clinic
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
Miami, FL
Prof. Panagiota V. Caralis, MD, JD, FACP

Medical Director, THRIVE Clinic
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
Miami, FL

Dr. Panagiota Caralis is a triple graduate of the University of Miami, receiving her BS, MD and JD degrees.  She is a Professor of Medicine at the Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami and serves as a Special Assistant to the Chief of Staff and Medical Director of the Women Veterans’ Health Program at the Miami VA.  She has taught courses at both the medical and law school in ethics and health law and has published research which spans both disciplines.

Currently, she directs a Medical Legal clinic serving veterans and a Health Law Pathway Program, which integrates the legal education for medical students throughout their medical school careers.  She is a part of the T.H.R.I.V.E. clinic which is an interdisciplinary clinic at JMH/UM which provides medical care for survivors of Human Trafficking.  She and Dr. JoNell Potter received the Innovators Award for their efforts from the State Attorney’s Office for the Eleventh Judicial Circuit, and she serves on the State Attorney’s Council addressing Human Trafficking.

Dr. Ronald Chambers, MD, FAAFP
Medical Director
Human Trafficking Medical Safe Haven
Dignity Health
Sacramento, CA
Dr. Ronald Chambers, MD, FAAFP

Medical Director
Human Trafficking Medical Safe Haven
Dignity Health
Sacramento, CA

Dr. Chambers attended medical school at George Washington, residency at Dignity Health Methodist Hospital, completed fellowships in Faculty Development, Program Director Development, and earned the title of Fellow of the American Academy of Family Physicians. He is the DIO and Program Director for the Dignity Health Methodist Family Medicine Residency Program, Chair of the Family Medicine Department, Chief of South Sacramento Hill Physicians, Medical Director for Mercy Medical Safe Haven Clinic, Physician Advisor for the Dignity Health Human Trafficking Response, Clinical Faculty for UC Davis School of Medicine, and Clinical Associate Professor for California Northstate College of Medicine. He is passionate about the acute and longitudinal care for patients who have experienced exploitation through human trafficking and the creation of trauma-informed, victim-centered “Medical Safe Havens” for survivors coinciding with resident physician education and training.  With promising outcomes for over 3000 patient visits provided, the Medical Safe Haven is a low cost and sustainable model that, if replicated, could provide widespread care while concurrently training the physicians of tomorrow to appropriately identify, respond to, and longitudinally treat this vulnerable patient population.

Dr. Laura Chilcutt, MD, JD
Pediatric Resident
Nemours Children’s Health Systems
Orlando, FL
Dr. Laura Chilcutt, MD, JD

Pediatric Resident
Nemours Children’s Health Systems
Orlando, FL

Dr. Laura Chilcutt is a pediatric resident at Nemours Children’s Hospital and a licensed attorney in Florida. She was an Equal Justice Works fellow who represented immigrant victims of human trafficking and domestic violence and later started a private immigration practice. She developed and operates the Nemours Mobile Clinic for uninsured children and is passionate about advocating for children and families. She is currently in her last year of pediatric residency and, upon graduating, she will use her training as a pediatrician and attorney to continue her advocacy work at the local, state, and national levels.

Jennifer Cox
Program Director
Human Trafficking Medical Safe Haven
Dignity Health
Sacramento, CA
Jennifer Cox

Program Director
Human Trafficking Medical Safe Haven
Dignity Health
Sacramento, CA

Jennifer Cox currently serves as the Program Director for Dignity Health’s Family Medicine Residency, Medical Safe Haven, a clinic model that provides trauma-informed care and equitable access to identified victims and survivors of human trafficking. Jennifer currently directs the replication of this clinic model within three Statewide Family Medicine Residency clinics for Dignity Health. Jennifer has served in healthcare for over 22 years, including 5 years as an Executive Director for a non-profit community resource center and clinic, and 12 years as an ICCE Health Educator.

Jennifer has a degree in Business Leadership from University of Arizona, Forbes School of Business and Technology.

Prof. Mollie Gordon, MA, MD
Speakers’ Bureau, HEAL Trafficking
Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, TX
Prof. Mollie Gordon, MA, MD

Speakers’ Bureau, HEAL Trafficking
Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, TX

Dr. Mollie Gordon is an Associate Professor in the Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas. She completed medical school and residency at Barnes Jewish Hospital at Washington University in St. Louis. She is clinical faculty, the Associate Director of the inpatient Psychiatric Unit at Ben Taub Hospital and supervises residents, medical students and a team of interdisciplinary providers. She cares for adults with acute exacerbations of chronic mental illness, many of whom are vulnerable and marginalized.

Her research background is in pharmacokinetics of dopamine dependent disease pathways, and the trauma of individuals who suffer from these conditions. She has worked with survivors of the 9/11 terrorist attacks to reintegrate them back into the workplace. In 2016 she participated in the development of the first fellowship in the mental health impacts of human trafficking at an academic medical center where she is Medical Director of this program. She is a co-chair of the American Medical Women’s Association – Physicians against the Trafficking of Humans where she leads train the trainer workshops nationally. She is on the HEAL trafficking speakers bureau, has testified for the national advisory council for the office of trafficking in persons, and lectures at national meetings on human trafficking.

Recently she founded BCM division of global mental health to treat survivors of torture, trafficking and mass violence atrocities. She has published numerous papers in the field, edited a book in the space, and won numerous awards for her work.

Maria Clara Harrington, MS
Training and Outreach Coordinator
CHANCE Program
Citrus Health Network, Inc.
Miami, FL
Maria Clara Harrington, MS

Training and Outreach Coordinator
CHANCE Program
Citrus Health Network, Inc.
Miami, FL

For 20 years, Maria Clara Harrington has been serving young survivors of sexual abuse, sexual exploitation and sex trafficking through counseling, advocacy and outreach. As the Training and Outreach Coordinator for the Citrus Health Network Chance Program, she is in a role that enables her to combine her experience working directly with survivors for many years, her understanding and compassion for survivors, with her skills as an educator, to train, raise awareness and understanding of child sexual exploitation. As a lead trainer, she has helped several other local, state, national and international communities launch a trauma-informed response, bringing together agencies involved in these complex cases.

Ms. Harrington continues to collaborate with other organizations in the development of a community-based, survivor and trauma-informed approach to commercial sexual exploitation of children that holds the promise of healing and restoring the life of exploited youth. Additionally, she currently serves as Chair of the Services Committee of the South Florida Human Trafficking Task Force, is also a fellow of the National Human Trafficking Leadership Academy and serves as a consultant for the National Human Trafficking Technical Assistance Center.

Ms. Harrington started her career in this field in 2001 at Kristi House and it was there, where she started working directly with survivors of sex trafficking and sexual exploitation in 2008 within Kristi House’s Program Project GOLD, founded by Sandy Skelaney. Maria Clara was in the trenches for many years, from responding to the 24-hour crisis hotline, leading teams of volunteers and going out at night from midnight to 4 a.m. looking for missing children and others who were on the streets, to advocating for the youth and providing supportive services. She also went into at-risk schools working with girls through a 16-week prevention and empowerment program. In 2013, Ms. Harrington had the opportunity to lead the launch of the first specialized Project GOLD drop-in center in the state of Florida for young female survivors of sexual exploitation. For five years she oversaw the day-to-day operations of the drop-in center and led a dedicated team of professionals working around the clock to provide support, mental health, educational, mentoring and enrichment services to child survivors of sexual exploitation and sex trafficking.

Maria Clara holds a master’s degree in School Counseling from NOVA Southeastern University. Maria Clara was the recipient of Florida’s Attorney General Pam Bondi’s 2015 Distinguished Victim Services Award, the Global Initiative Consulting Network’s 2019 Outstanding Leadership Award, and the Junior League of Miami Women Who Make a Difference 2020 award.

Professor Dr. Mohamed Y. Mattar
United Nations Senior Expert in Criminal Justice & Clinical Professor of Law
Qatar University College of Law
Doha, Qatar
Professor Dr. Mohamed Y. Mattar

United Nations Senior Expert in Criminal Justice & Clinical Professor of Law
Qatar University College of Law
Doha, Qatar

Dr. Mattar is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Law Clinic at Qatar University College of Law. Dr. Mattar’s professional expertise is in comparative and international law.  Recognized as an international expert on anti-trafficking legislation, Dr. Mattar has worked over 15 years in more than 75 countries, including countries in the Middle East, to promote state compliance with international human rights standards and to advise governments on drafting, and enforcing human rights laws. Dr. Mattar has testified in the United States on the status of human trafficking around the world at various Congressional Hearings. He also testified before the Russian Duma, the Mexican Senate, the Inter-American Human Rights Commission and the Egyptian Parliament.

He was the Executive Director of The Protection Project of the Foreign Policy Institute at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, D.C., from 2005 to 2014. In this role, he directed and supervised seven areas: Trafficking in Persons; Clinical Legal Education; Corporate Social Responsibility; Legal Reform; Promotion of Religious Dialogue; Enhancing Capacity of Civil Society; and Human Rights Education. He monitored, analyzed and reported on violations of human rights, conducted training and capacity building programs for NGOs, government officials and service providers, while working towards universal implementation of human rights.

He has taught at Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, D.C., and Indiana University School of Law in Indianapolis. Dr. Mattar teaches courses on International Trafficking in Persons; Labor Law; Corporate Social Responsibility; International Contract Law; Investment and Trade Laws of the Middle East; Islamic Law; Introduction to the American Legal System; International Business and Human Rights; and Legal Ethics. His latest publications include Medical Liability for Trafficking in Persons for the Purpose of Human Experimentation: International Standards and Comparative Models from Arab Jurisdictions, International Annals of Criminology 2017.

Dr. Mattar is a consultant at The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), where he advises on International and National Laws on Combating Trafficking in Persons, Legislative Drafting, Drafting of Strategies and Action Plans, Legal Aid, and Middle East Legal Systems.

Dr. Mattar received his Doctorate of Juridical Sciences (S.J.D.) and Master of Laws (LL.M) from Tulane University, his Master of Comparative Law (M.C.L.) from the University of Miami, and his License en Droit (LL.B.) from Alexandria University where he still serves as a non-resident distinguished professor of law.

Dr. Elizabeth K. Hopper
Director, Project REACH
The Trauma Center at Justice Resource Institute
Brookline, MA
Dr. Elizabeth K. Hopper

Director, Project REACH
The Trauma Center at Justice Resource Institute
Brookline, MA

Elizabeth Hopper is a licensed clinical psychologist with a specialization in traumatic stress. She completed a Master of Science degree and Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology at St. Louis University, an internship at the Medical College of Virginia, and a postdoctoral fellowship at the Trauma Center in Boston. Dr. Hopper is an administrator, supervisor, clinician, and member of the Training Faculty at the Trauma Center at Justice Resource Institute, a leading agency in the study and treatment of the psychological impact of exposure to trauma. She is the Project Director of the Metropolitan Boston Complex Trauma Treatment Initiative (MB-CTTI), a mobile service network delivering evidence-based trauma interventions to high-risk and underserved complex trauma-exposed children and youth ages 0-21 living in the Metropolitan Boston region. As part of her anti-trafficking work, she is the Director of Project REACH, a program that serves victims of human trafficking throughout the United States; Director of the New England Coalition Against Trafficking, a regional network of anti-trafficking professionals; and Co-Chair of the Mental Health Council for HEAL Trafficking, a national network of health and public health professionals.

Dr. Hopper is the co-author of two books that address body-oriented intervention, including Treating Adult Survivors of Childhood Emotional Abuse and Neglect: Component-Based Psychotherapy, which presents a complex trauma treatment framework for adults, and Overcoming Trauma Through Yoga: Reclaiming Your Body, a book that introduces yoga as a body-based intervention for trauma. She has written numerous scholarly articles and book chapters on complex trauma, trauma-informed care, homelessness, and human trafficking and is on the editorial review boards of several professional journals. She has a strong interest in integration across treatment models and in interventions that can be individually adapted. She has collaborated with numerous agencies and organizations in developing trauma-informed care systems.

Dr. Philip Larrey, PhD
Chair, Logic & Epistemology
Dean, Philosophy Department
Pontifical Lateran University, The Vatican
Rome, Italy
Dr. Philip Larrey, PhD

Chair, Logic & Epistemology
Dean, Philosophy Department
Pontifical Lateran University, The Vatican
Rome, Italy

Philip Larrey, Ph.D., is a Catholic priest who holds the Chair of Logic and Epistemology at the Pontifical Lateran University in the Vatican, and currently is Dean of the Philosophy Department. His publications deal with the philosophy of knowledge and critical thinking. He has published several books concerning the effects of the new digital era on society. Two of his recent works highlight this theme: Futuro ignoto (IF Press) and Connected World (Penguin). The Italian translation of this latter was published by Mondadori in 2018, entitled, Dove inizia il futuro.

For years he has been following the philosophical implications of the rapid development of artificial intelligence. With candor, he challenges industry leaders he comes into contact with at the Vatican to discuss how technology is shaping the fabric of our society. His new book, Artificial Humanity, delves into a more philosophical discussion of what AI research means for all of humanity.

Prof. Laura J. Lederer, JD
President, Global Centurion
TIP Subject Matter Expert, U.S. DOD, HSS, & DOJ
Founder, The Protection Project at Harvard University
Fairfax, VA
Prof. Laura J. Lederer, JD

President, Global Centurion
TIP Subject Matter Expert, U.S. DOD, HSS, & DOJ
Founder, The Protection Project at Harvard University
Fairfax, VA

Laura J. Lederer, J.D., is a Subject Matter Expert on Human Trafficking and President of Global Centurion, an anti-trafficking NGO.  She serves as Subject Matter Expert on Trafficking in Persons for U.S. government agencies including the U.S. Department of Defense, Department of Health and Human Services, and Department of Justice.   Recent projects have included the development of a data collection instrument for tracking labor and sex trafficking cases in the Department of Defense; the development of the HHS SOAR to Health and Wellness training on human trafficking for healthcare professionals;  training and technical assistance efforts on human trafficking for HHS’ Family Youth Services Bureau (FSYB); and a specialized training and supplemental materials on human trafficking for the Office of Population Affairs (OPA) Title X Family Planning Clinics.

Prior to her work at Global Centurion she served for eight years in the U.S. Department of State as Senior Advisor on Trafficking in Persons to Under Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs where she helped to stand up the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons.   From 2002 - 2009, she was also the Executive Directorship of the Senior Policy Operating Group on Trafficking in Persons, a policy group that staffed the President’s cabinet-level Interagency Task Force on Trafficking in Persons. She founded and directed The Protection Project at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government in 1997 and moved it to Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in the year 2000.  At Georgetown Law Center, she developed and co-taught the first law school course on human trafficking from 2001 – 2014.

She was an expert consultant for “The Day My God Died,” a feature-length documentary that casts a spotlight on the devastating impact child sex trafficking has upon the lives of children trafficked from Nepal to India.  She was an advisor for the New York Times article that served as the basis for "Trade," a feature length drama based on real cases of international sex trafficking and starring Kevin Kline.

Over the past fifteen years she worked extensively with survivors of human trafficking to document their experiences with first responders, particularly in health care.  She is the primary investigator and author of a landmark study entitled, “The Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking,” published in the University of Loyola Chicago Annals of Health Law, in which she interviewed domestic survivors of sex trafficking about their physical and mental health problems.  In 2014 she testified in the House of Representatives at a hearing for the passage of a bill to address training, referral, reporting, rescue issues for health providers. This testimony led to the drafting and passage of Title VII of the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act of 2015.

She is the author of numerous articles on trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation including “Sold for Sex; the Link Between Street Gangs and Human Trafficking,” “Addressing Demand: Why and How Policymakers Should Utilize Law and Law Enforcement to Target Customers of Commercial Sexual Exploitation,” and “Is There Justice in Johns Schools?”  During the course of her work, she has spoken at over 500 governmental, inter-governmental and non-governmental events.

Her most recent book is Modern Slavery: A Documentary and Reference Guide to the Development of the 21st Anti-Trafficking Movement, published in 2018 by Greenwood Publishing Company.  The book tells the story of the modern day anti-slavery movement through a primary source materials including documents, speeches, pamphlets, treaties, laws, and articles spanning more than 300 years, and tracks a rising consciousness about the many forms of modern-day slavery and the people and organizations that worked and are working to combat it.

Barbara A. Martinez, Esq.
Partner, Holland & Knight LLP
Former Chief of Special Prosecutions Section
U.S. Attorney’s Office, SDFL
Miami, FL
Barbara A. Martinez, Esq.

Partner, Holland & Knight LLP
Former Chief of Special Prosecutions Section
U.S. Attorney’s Office, SDFL
Miami, FL

Barbara A. Martinez is a member of Holland & Knight’s Global Compliance and Investigation Team in the firm’s Miami office.  After a distinguished career handling an array of significant matters as a federal prosecutor, she focuses her practice on internal corporate investigations, corporate compliance and training, and white collar criminal defense.

Prior to joining Holland & Knight, Ms. Martinez served as the Chief of the Special Prosecutions Section at the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida in Miami. In this capacity, she supervised federal prosecutors who handled cases involving international and domestic human trafficking, money laundering, child exploitation, extortion, international kidnappings, and other transnational crimes.  Ms. Martinez was also the Human Trafficking Coordinator and the Project Safe Childhood Coordinator for the Southern District of Florida for more than a decade. As the Coordinator for these programs, Ms. Martinez spearheaded coordination efforts between law enforcement, non-governmental organizations, and prosecutors nationwide and globally to more effectively prevent and identify human trafficking and child exploitation, as well as to investigate and successfully prosecute cases.  She also routinely collaborated with foreign governments, private industries, non-governmental organizations, and community members to assist in these efforts and raise public awareness.

Ms. Martinez also previously worked as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Economic Crimes Section and a Department of Justice (DOJ) Trial Attorney for the Fraud Section of the Criminal Division in Washington, D.C.  In these roles, Ms. Martinez prosecuted complex white collar cases involving health care fraud, bank fraud, mail and wire fraud, telemarketing fraud, identity theft and credit card fraud, computer intrusion, false statements, and obstruction of justice.

Ms. Martinez has tried more than 20 jury trial cases in federal court and more than 30 bench trials in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. Some of her notable federal trials include:

a six-week international sex trafficking case;
a month-long sex trafficking case involving 50 adult victims from across the United States;
a two-week multimillion-dollar health care fraud case against the owner of a medical clinic;
a three-week multimillion-dollar health care fraud case against two physicians; and
a nine-day multimillion-dollar Department of Education fraud case against the owners of a vocational school.

Ms. Martinez also has extensive experience teaching and conducting training courses.  She conducted and created anti-trafficking and money laundering training sessions for law enforcement, prosecutors, victim advocates, and members of the financial industry throughout the United States and in foreign countries including Mexico, The Bahamas, St. Lucia, Barbados, Portugal, Latvia, Poland, Bulgaria, and Iceland. She taught trial advocacy to law enforcement and prosecutors in Chile and a session about computer crimes to representatives of financial institutions in Peru. In addition, Ms. Martinez teaches a human trafficking seminar at the University of Miami School of Law.

Ms. Martinez joined the DOJ in 1997 as a trial attorney through the Attorney General's Honors Program. She worked for the fraud section in the criminal division from 1997 until 2000, when she joined the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida.

Ms. Martinez is the recipient of numerous honors and awards including:  Attorney General's Award for Distinguished Service, DOJ, 2018; Women of Distinction Award, Dade County Bar Association Government Committee, 2018; Wasserstein Public Interest Fellow, Harvard Law School, 2016-2017; Director's Award for Superior Performance, DOJ, 2015 and 2005; Top Prosecutor Award, Women in Federal Law Enforcement, 2013; Prosecutor Hero Award, Shared Hope International, 2013; Outstanding Partnership Coalition Group Award, DOJ, 2011; 40 Under 40 Outstanding Lawyers, Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, 2011; Director’s Honor Award, U.S. Secret Service, 2010; Meritorious Public Service Award, U.S. Coast Guard, 2007; and the Group Achievement Award, Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association, 2004.

Angelita Olowu, BSN, RN, SANE-A, SANE-P
Forensic Nursing Specialist
International Association of Forensic Nurses
Elkridge, MD
Angelita Olowu, BSN, RN, SANE-A, SANE-P

Forensic Nursing Specialist
International Association of Forensic Nurses
Elkridge, MD

Angelita Olowu serves as a Forensic Nursing Specialist with the International Association of Forensic Nurses with 13 years of nursing experience. She has a background in Emergency and Trauma Nursing. In her current role, Angelita provides training and technical assistance on various topics related to the care of patients that have experienced sexual violence including the recommendations within both of the National Adolescent/ Adult and Pediatric Sexual SAFE Protocols. Angelita teaches IAFN Adolescent/ Adult and Pediatric Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner didactic and clinical courses, Indian Health Service trainings and courses, and provides education statewide and nationally.

Prof. Ryszard Piotrowicz
Professor of Law, Aberystwyth University
Vice-President of GRETA
Council of Europe's Group of Experts on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings (2017-2020)
Ceredigion, Wales
Prof. Ryszard Piotrowicz

Professor of Law, Aberystwyth University
Vice-President of GRETA
Council of Europe's Group of Experts on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings (2017-2020)
Ceredigion, Wales

Ryszard Piotrowicz has been a professor in the Department of Law and Criminology at Aberystwyth University since 1999. From 1988-99 he taught at the University of Tasmania, where he eventually became Dean of the Law Faculty. He specialises in migration law. He was a member of GRETA, the Council of Europe’s Group of Experts on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings from 2013-20, Vice-President from 2017-20. He also served two terms as a member of the European Commission’s Group of Experts on Trafficking in Human Beings (2008-15). He is Adjunct Professor at the University of South Australia, Visiting Professor in Migration Law at Viadrina University, Frankfurt-Oder, and a Senior Research Associate at the Refugee Law Initiative, University of London. He is an Alexander-von-Humboldt Fellow, and a Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales. He has acted as a consultant on human trafficking for the Council of Europe, IOM, OSCE, UNHCR, EU and ICMPD, as well as national governments and NGOs, and has conducted training programmes on human trafficking in many countries. He has published extensively on the law relating to human trafficking and migration. He is a member of the Wales Anti-Slavery Leadership Group, and is currently working on a number of projects relating to legal issues concerning human trafficking. He is a member of the Board of Editors of the International Journal of Refugee Law.

Ericka Reil
Peer Specialist
Another Way Community Center
Montpelier, VT
Ericka Reil

Peer Specialist
Another Way Community Center
Montpelier, VT

Ericka Reil is a person with a disability. She has worked in disability rights for almost 20 years in different capacities. Currently she works for a drop in center for people that are homeless and have psychiatric labels. When Ericka is not working her day job, she is active in local politics, chairs various boards and committees and sits on the Vermont Human Trafficking Task Force. She trains all over the country and speaks about human trafficking of people with disabilities making it known that this issue needs to be talked about. When she has down time, she is at home with her family, pets, and a good book.

Special Sessions with Distinguished Survivor Leaders

Survivors Who Thrive: A Fireside Chat with Dr. Roza Pati and The Honorable Robert R. Lung

The Honorable Robert R. Lung

District Court Judge, 18th Judicial Circuit of Colorado
Chair (2018-2020) and Member, U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
Member, International Council on Human Trafficking
Castle Rock, CO

Survivors’ Perspectives: The Impact of Health Care Professionals in Integral Development