the ukraine and me

9
THE UKRAINE AND ME

Upload: minnesota-state-university-moorhead

Post on 25-Jun-2015

225 views

Category:

News & Politics


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Ukraine And Me

THE UKRAINE AND ME

Page 2: The Ukraine And Me

ABOUT ME:

My name is Abby. I have 3 children, ages 3, 18 months, and 4

months. I also have a wonderful husband. I am just starting back at school after a 4

year break and majoring in English with a Sociology minor.

All 3 of my children have their Grandparents’ names as their middle name.

Page 3: The Ukraine And Me

I lived in Iowa till I was 10, then moved to Minnesota and have lived here ever since.

I graduated from Benson, MN in 1998 with 98 students.

I stay home with my children during the day and have since they were born.

I enjoy spending time with my family and friends, cooking, home projects, crafts, and scrapbooking.

I have been a die-hard Vikings fan for all my life.

Page 4: The Ukraine And Me

ABOUT THE UKRAINE:

A former state of the Soviet Union, the Ukraine has been independent since 1991, with a current population of 47,732,079 with Kiev being the largest city and also their capital.

Their population is declining by .66% as of late. The birth rate is one of the lowest at 10.21 / 1000 people and a infant mortality rate of 20.61 / 1000. The fertility rate is 1.37 children born per woman on average. The government is taking steps to increase the population by providing greater financial support and incentives to those who bear children.

The literacy rate is near 100% for both sexes.

Page 5: The Ukraine And Me

Though there are several different industries such as the coal, electric power, mining, machinery, transportation equipment, chemicals, food processing (especially sugar), and excellent soil for agriculture, the Ukraine has high unemployment since the dissolving of the USSR. Of the people that have lost their jobs since 1991, 80% are women.

The country is currently looking at 2/3 of their women being unemployed.

Many women are either being kidnapped or lured into prostitution or the sex trade.

Page 6: The Ukraine And Me

The Sex tourism in the Ukraine is the fastest growing in the world. There are male tourists that visit the Ukraine specifically to have sex with many women or to find a wife.

2/3 of young Ukrainian women want to go abroad. 70% of women that have been trafficked are

often recruited to leave their country and become either dancers, waitresses, or models in other countries.

When these women get to another country, their passports and papers are often destroyed or taken in order to gain control by the traffickers.

Page 7: The Ukraine And Me

65% of trafficking cases were performed by organized crime groups. Many based out of Russia.

80% of the traffickers are Ukrainian and 60% of them are women. These women are often former prostitutes who become traffickers.

Women who are kidnapped for the sex trade often lose the support of their families and are not welcomed home if they escape.

Often the only way out of the prostitution for these women is by deportation.

Page 8: The Ukraine And Me

There are several on-line marriage sites offering Ukrainian women for marriage abroad.

Many women from rural communities feel that rich men from other countries will be their ticket out of poverty.

A review of 219 on-line marriage sites found 32,000 women up for marriage.

The demand for Ukrainian women has surpassed Asian women in massage parlors and brothels across the world.

The U.N. and the Ukrainian government have begun to address the issues of trafficking and mail-order brides but law enforcement is inconsistent and difficult to regulate.

Page 9: The Ukraine And Me

BIBLIOGRAPHY CIA – The World Fact Book. Retrieved from

http://www.umsl.edu/services/govdocs/wofact2004/geos/up.html.

The Global Post. http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/russia-and-its-neighbors/090608/sex-tourism .

Hughes, Donna M.; Denisova, Tatyana. Trafficking in Women From Ukraine. December, 2003.

The New York Times: Traffickers’ New Cargo: Naïve Slavic Women. Michael Specter. January 11, 1998.

Unicef. Retrieved from http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/ukraine_statistics.html#59 .

Wikipedia. Retrieved January 18, 2010, from http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/ukraine#Demographics