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Crude Conversations

EP 149 Human trafficking in Alaska and decolonizing data with Josie Heyano

Crude Conversations

crudemag

Society & Culture

5884 Ratings

🗓️ 18 April 2024

⏱️ 88 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this one, Cody and co-host Aurora Ford talk to Josie Hayano. Aurora is a former journalist and works at Covenant House Alaska; Josie is a member of the United States Advisory Council on Human Trafficking, a presidentially appointed position. She was the first Alaska Native person to be on the board. Every member of the board is a human trafficking survivor and advises and makes recommendations on federal anti-trafficking policies. Josie’s perspective and contribution to that conversation is Alaskan. She’s often thinking about rural communities and the human trafficking issues they face — she says that most of the trafficking she’s seen there has an element of substance use coercion, mental health coercion and/or forced drug trafficking. And because of the remoteness of these communities, it could take three days and a float plane and a boat ride to respond to a crime. In 2022, Josie, Charlene Apok of Data for Indigenous Justice, Prevention Now and Ride My Road started a yearly gathering called “The Alaska Data Summit: Translating Data into Action Against Trafficking Exploitation and Missing and Murdered Indigenous Relatives.” One of the missions of the summit is to decolonize data so that, in the future, Native communities can reclaim and own their own data. It’s about taking back information so that it can be used for healing. Josie says that it’s about “making the data tell our stories” and “making it be representative of who we are.” Because data is a universal language, it doesn’t matter what field you work in, we all can understand numbers and their prevalence. So, by creating a universal data system throughout Alaska, information can be shared within the community, paving a path for a deeper understanding and better solutions to human trafficking.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the show.

0:17.0

the show. In this one, co-host Aurora Ford and I talked to Josie Hiano.

0:24.0

Aurora is a former journalist and works at Covenant House Alaska. Josie is a member of the United States Advisory Council on Human Trafficking,

0:29.0

a presidentially appointed position.

0:32.0

She was the first Alaska Native person to be on the board.

0:35.3

Every member on the board is a human trafficking survivor and advises and

0:41.0

makes recommendations on federal anti-trafficking policies.

0:45.6

Josie's perspective and contribution to that conversation is Alaskan.

0:51.6

She's often thinking about rural communities and the human trafficking issues they face.

0:56.9

She says that most of the trafficking she sees there has an element of substance use coercion, mental health coercion, and or forced

1:07.6

drug trafficking. And because of the remoteness of these communities,

1:13.0

it could take three days and a float plane and a boat ride

1:18.0

to respond to a crime.

1:22.0

This podcast is made possible through the generous support of the crude magazine

1:26.8

Patreon subscribers. If you already subscribe to the crude magazine

1:30.8

Patreon, thank you. For those listeners who aren't, please

1:34.8

consider subscribing at patreon.com slash crude magazine. That's

1:41.5

patreon.com slash crude magazine.

1:45.0

And pick the subscription tier that works for you.

1:48.0

I want to thank everyone subscribed at the company man tier.

1:52.0

These are the people who have subscribed to the company Mantier. These are the people who have

1:53.4

subscribed to the crude Patreon for $50 or more. Trina Dober. Seward

...

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