A Solution Big Enough: Stanford’s Data-Driven Fight Against Modern Slavery in Brazil

A Solution Big Enough: Stanford’s Data-Driven Fight Against Modern Slavery in Brazil

Meet the team behind an ambitious anti-trafficking research agenda, including SHP's Kim Babiarz and Grant Miller.
Brazil Aerial
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For over 25 years, Stanford’s Kimberly Babiarz has felt fiercely devoted to addressing the complex injustice of human trafficking, a crime she is quick to point out, “is everywhere.” 

Modern slavery, which includes sex and labor trafficking, forced labor, domestic servitude, debt bondage, and forced marriage, is “a big, systemic problem in need of big, systemic solutions,” she notes.

Those kinds of solutions typically require a diverse array of skillsets and experience – not to mention a great deal of dedication to the work, both of which Babiarz found when she and longtime collaborator Grant Miller, Henry J. Kaiser, Jr. Professor in the Department of Health Policy at Stanford School of Medicine, linked up with Jessie Brunner of Stanford’s Center for Human Rights and International Justice, Clinical Associate Professor of Pediatrics Vicki Ward, and Luis Assis, labor prosecutor and Chief Data Scientist at Brazil’s Federal Labor Prosecution Office.

The group coalesced around a shared sense of frustration at the lack of an evidence base undergirding decades of anti-trafficking interventions and the Stanford Human Trafficking Data Lab was born in 2019 with a mission to bring data and evidence to the fight against human trafficking.

“Few things give me more satisfaction than gathering folks with disparate backgrounds and skillsets towards achieving a common goal to advance human rights,” said Brunner. “Forming the Lab was a unique opportunity to leverage advances in data science and technological innovation to bear on one of the most grievous abuses of our time.”

Fairly quickly, the team identified a gap they could fill in and around the remote Amazon region in northeastern Brazil.

“The steady pace of deforestation and land conversion in the Amazon relies on the exploitation of people, including some children, who work strenuous 16-hour days, often without pay, burning trees at extremely high temperatures and converting them into charcoal,” explains Miller, the Lab’s Principal Investigator. “This all takes place at illegal work sites, where laborers live without adequate shelter or clean water, that are intentionally hidden from view in remote areas.”

Because these sites consist of an almost geometric line-up of dome-shaped kilns devoted to burning trees and an output of thick smoke, the researchers realized their footprints are uniquely visible from space. 

Using geospatial data and remote detection algorithms, the lab was able to pinpoint a clear way in which data science could be leveraged to help Brazilian prosecutors locate and investigate the stealth work sites where laborers are often exploited in conditions analogous to slavery. 

At a Stanford Impact Labs storytelling event in April, Babiarz vividly described the thrill of realizing that an algorithm could be put to work against this severe, yet frequently invisible, human rights issue plaguing Brazil. By building a data-driven tool to find and map illegal charcoal production sites, she described how her team helped law enforcement uncover nearly 200 previously unknown sites.

Most exciting of all, prosecutors were able to inspect 130 of those sites and carried out 10 times more task force raids than historically observed. Most importantly, the team observed a surge in the number of workers rescued from conditions of modern slavery, a more than 10-fold increase compared to typical years. The team is now rolling the tool out to every charcoal producing region in Brazil and exploring the tool’s applicability potential in other geographies and sectors. 

“We found a way to build a solution big enough to meet the scale of the problem in a corner of the world that really needs it,” Babiarz notes. "We also found a great deal of hope in being a part of this solution. By harnessing powerful technology in the context of a trusted partnership, we were able to deliver real impact to people in need of real help.”

The steady pace of deforestation and land conversion in the Amazon relies on the exploitation of people.
Grant Miller, PhD
Professor of Health Policy and Director of the Trafficking Lab

The team's work in Brazil is far from over. 

With funding from Stanford Impact Labs, the Lab is expanding the impact of their work in Brazil’s charcoal sector, working with Brazil’s Federal Labor Prosecution Office to create a new data-driven technical tool to map exploitative supply chains. The tool will identify labor trafficking and illegal deforestation in distant tiers of the supply chain by integrating data from siloed publicly available administrative and legal records, making it easier for private sector steel manufacturers to address both trafficking and deforestation in their supply chains.

“The supply chain tracing tool is yet another example of the way our Lab is leveraging advances in data and social sciences to reach more trafficking victims and hold their exploiters accountable,” said Assis. “This has the potential to really change the game.”

This story was originally published by Stanford Impact Labs Director of Strategic Communications & Outreach Kate Green Tripp.

 

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