Jane
Lasonder
Jane Lasonder is a member of the Inter Parliamentary Task Force.
The Interparliamentary Taskforce on Human Trafficking is a consortium of Members of Parliament and Congress, government leaders, and lived-experience experts who are committed to creating policy solutions and educating lawmakers to stop one of the greatest humanitarian crises in the world today, human trafficking Jane is an international speaker speaking at events, conferences, tv, radio,the UN for the WHO and other organisations.
Jane was for 2 years a first responder for the NRM . She has developed training and gives training to (anti trafficking) police, security, border force, schools, medical students, doctors and governments.
She founded the Red Alert task Force.
She is an author of 3 books, "Jane" her personal story, "Red Alert:" the inside story of forced prostitution and Human trafficking and "Health and Slavery" a health care guide to slavery and trafficking which has been published internationally by Springer. She works with the British Embassy and a Romanian org eLiberare on a health care project in Romania.
As a survivor of child trafficking Jane shares her expertise and insight with organisations and groups interested in increasing their knowledge and awareness of slavery and trafficking, including school age children, teens and medical students. She works as a consultant with the UN, WHO,OSCE/ODIHR and other organisations and advises and works with different governments and media, including the European parliament, Romanian parliament, Netherlands parliament and Israel ministry of Justice. She is also a member of Modern Slavery and Human Rights Policy and Evidence centre (MSPEC) working with them and Oxford University on the Lived Experience Advisory panel (LEAP) doing research, advising, writing for the media and events.
Jane also has published articles in the media and in Cambridge University Journal.
She also advises the Independent Anti Slavery Commissioner (IASC) UK Eleanor Lyons and is setting up a National Survivors of Trafficking Advisory Council (NSTAC) with Eleanor and the British home office.