PROTECTING OUR INNOCENCE: New Zealand's National Plan of Action Against the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children

Foreword |Background |The Situation in New Zealand | Child Prostitution |Child Pornography | Child Sex Tourism | Child Trafficking | Activities to Address CSEC in General | Table of Activities

Background

The term commercial sexual exploitation of children (or CSEC) is used to describe the various activities that exploit children for their commercial value including child prostitution, child pornography, child sex tourism and child trafficking for sexual purposes.

The term implies that the child is not only sexually exploited but that there is a profit arising from the transaction, in cash or kind, where the child is considered to be a sexual and commercial object. According to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which New Zealand has ratified, a child is a person aged under 18 years of age.

In 1994 the ECPAT (End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes) Campaign proposed a World Congress to encourage the direct involvement of governments in ending the commercial sexual exploitation of children. In 1996 a World Congress against the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children was held in Stockholm. At the Congress, delegates representing 122 countries unanimously adopted a Declaration and Agenda for Action, thus committing themselves to a global partnership against the commercial sexual exploitation of children. The Agenda for Action is essentially a set of guidelines for concrete action. It proposes a five-pronged approach to the eradication of CSEC:


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