“…In 2003, India, Brazil, and South Africa co-founded the IBSA Dialogue Forum, or IBSA, to counter marginalization and promote social equality among the Global South nations. IBSA’s underpinning principles, norms, and values include participatory democracy and respect for human rights (Sosale and Rosas-Moreno, 2016) – despite each regional economic leader’s reputation for human rights violations: South Africa underwent years of international pressure to disband apartheid and continues to wrestle with violent crime, possessing one of the world’s highest murder rates; Brazil, the last Western hemisphere nation to formally abolish slavery in 1888, continues its struggles for racial equality, despite claims of being a racial democracy; and, India, the world’s largest democracy and this study’s focus, has more people enslaved than any other country (NDTV, 2016). Harboring hideous histories of oppression, these linked democracies face another huge human rights antagonist: the social injustice of human trafficking.…”