Social Media Toolkit
Human Trafficking Prevention Month
The National Human Trafficking Prevention Month campaign takes place annually in January. Please use the text below and attached images, or share directly from our platforms (Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.)
Dates to Remember: Wear Blue Day is January 11, 2025
URL: DFPS - Human Trafficking and Child Exploitation
Sample Social Media Posts
Hashtags: #HumanTraffickingPreventionMonth #LightTheWayEndHumanTrafficking #WearBlueDay #TXPraysToEndHT #TXBlueLights #BeTheOne #TXHTPCC
- January marks the start of a new year. It's also National Human Trafficking Prevention MonthExternal Link.
- It's Human Trafficking Prevention MonthExternal Link. Let’s take extra steps and be diligent about the digital space our children inhabit. Double-check games, apps, and social media sites before they hit download.
- Do you know the signs of human trafficking happening in your own backyard? Learn how to identify and help victims, watch Look Beneath the SurfaceExternal Link.
- January 11 is Wear Blue DayExternal Link, and we're taking a stand and shining a light on the dark realities of human traffickingExternal Link. This global issue is not confined to any group. It remains hidden in plain sight and often unrecognized. We can all play a role in raising awareness, reporting concerns, and supporting survivors. Get involved! Share your photo donning blue, and let's stand together to end human trafficking.
- Human trafficking is a GLOBAL issue, and it takes place right under our noses. WATCH and share this powerful video on human trafficking and Be the OneExternal Link in this fight!
- MYTH: Human trafficking is only sex trafficking.
FACT: Sex trafficking is not the only type of human trafficking. Forced labor is another type of human trafficking because both involve exploitation of people. Go to Red Flags for Labor TraffickingExternal Link.
- Staggering Fact Alert: Did you know that human trafficking is one of the most devastating human rights violations occurring across our globe today? Find out resources to bring offenders to justice: Human Trafficking Resources
- It takes only one person to find a missing child. See Texas’ current list of Missing Children with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Go to Missing KidsExternal Link or Missing and Exploited ChildrenExternal Link.
- Do you know how to report trafficking? Never attempt to confront a suspected trafficker directly or alert a victim to your suspicions. Your safety as well as the victim’s safety could be in danger.
- To report suspected human trafficking, go to IwatchTexasExternal Link or call 844-643-2251
- Dial 911 in an emergency
- Want to find ways you can help fight human trafficking? Go to 20 Ways You Can HelpExternal Link to find out more! Anyone can join the fight to #endhumantrafficking.
Sample Images
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Statewide Resources:
- Children at RiskExternal Link
- Children Advocacy Centers External Link
- Office of the Texas GovernorExternal Link
- Texas Attorney General of TexasExternal Link
- Texas Health and Human ServicesExternal Link
National Resources:
- Department of Homeland Security - Blue CampaignExternal Link
- Domestic Trafficking Hotlines (U.S. Department of State)External Link
- GemsExternal Link
- Love 146External Link
- National Center for Missing and Exploited ChildrenExternal Link
- National Human Trafficking HotlineExternal Link
- Office on Trafficking in Persons (Administration of Children and Families)External Link
- Polaris ProjectExternal Link
- Shared Hope InternationalExternal Link
- Truckers Against TraffickingExternal Link