Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 78— - TRAFFICKING VICTIMS PROTECTION › § 7112
Congress requires U.S. officials to step up efforts to find and stop forced labor and child labor in other countries. Congress found that a June 2005 report showed many countries had forced labor problems, including women forced into domestic servitude. The Director of the State Department’s anti‑trafficking office must focus more on forced labor in those countries and others with serious problems. The Secretary of State must regularly give the Department of Labor information about child and forced labor tied to the production of goods. The Secretary of Labor, through the Bureau of International Labor Affairs, must do five things: monitor forced and child labor; share information on trafficking for forced labor with the State Department for its trafficking report; create and publish a list of goods from countries that the Bureau has reason to believe are made with forced or child labor (including goods made with inputs from such labor when possible); work with producers on that list to set better practices to prevent this labor; and coordinate with other U.S. agencies to keep such products out of the United States. The Bureau must send that list to Congress by December 1, 2014, and every 2 years after that.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 7112
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73