This year’s United Nations World Day Against Trafficking in Humans is July 30. The theme is “Human Trafficking is Organized Crime—End the Exploitation.” More and more victims are being trafficked every year across greater distances, with greater violence, for longer periods of time and for greater profit. Organized criminal networks are driving this victimization and exploitation using migration flows, global supply chains, legal and economic loopholes and digital platforms, resulting in cross-border trafficking at a massive scale. Despite some progress, criminal justice responses fall short in tackling this rapidly evolving crime. Ensuring justice for survivors requires holding perpetrators accountable and providing a victim-centered approach to protection, support and access to justice. This year’s campaign highlights the vital role of law enforcement agencies--local, national, and global--in using online platforms and conducting in-person outreach. This effort will reach a wide audience, raise public awareness and promote reporting channels for suspected trafficking. Companies can also play a critical role in preventing forced labor within their operations and supply chains, and consumers can help by supporting those companies that are committed to transparency and ethical labor practices. Survivors emphasize that escaping is just the beginning. Many face additional trauma navigating systems of support services that are often ill-equipped to meet their needs, and many suffer from long-term health conditions that require treatment for a lifetime. A survivor trafficked as a child stated that “trafficking can’t be addressed without involvement of everyone, without society as a whole.”