dc.description.abstract | Human trafficking is not unfamiliar, but has become a protracted national and international problem, which is very difficult to eradicate and is even referred to by the international community as a form of contemporary slavery and human rights violations. In more detail, the definition of trafficking in persons is the act of recruiting, transporting, harboring, sending, transferring, or receiving a person by threat of violence, use of force, abduction, confinement, forgery, fraud, abuse of power or vulnerable position, debt bondage or giving payments or benefits, so as to obtain the consent of the person who has control over the other person, both within the country and between countries for the purpose of exploitation. Exploitation is an act with or without the consent of the victim which includes forced labor or service, slavery or practices similar to slavery, oppression, extortion, physical, sexual, reproductive organ utilization, or unlawfully transferring or transplanting organs and/or body tissue or utilizing a person's energy or ability by another party for material or immaterial gain. The research method used in this thesis is normative juridical through library research. To carry out the eradication of Trafficking in Persons (TPPO), the government and local governments are obliged to take measures for the prevention and handling of TPPO (Article 58 paragraph (1) stipulated in Law No. 21 of 2007 concerning Eradication of Trafficking in Persons (TPPO). This law comprehensively regulates the definition of trafficking in persons, sanctions for perpetrators, and protection and recovery for victims. In addition, this law also covers cooperation between various parties, including the international community, in combating trafficking. The case with case number 1625/Pid.Sus/2020/PN Mdn and the ruling number 262/Pid.Sus/2020/PN Mdn, which has been resolved in court, can serve as a real example of the extent of protection for victims of female trafficking in Indonesia. | en_US |