2026 Applications Now Open!
Anti-Trafficking Innovation Advisory Council
What is the Anti-Trafficking Advisory Council?
The Anti-Trafficking Innovation Advisory Council is a cross-disciplinary brain trust that:
❋ Elevates evidence & experience
Engaging in deep knowledge sharing across industries, the council is in a constant cycle of elevating the new and novel ways to combat human trafficking and forced labor in the field.
❋ Identifies impact-driven practices
Through a culture of open collaboration, members help identify the best practices that are currently driving the most impact in anti-trafficking efforts, while surfacing new ideas for techniques that may increase efficacy.
❋ Accelerates progress
The council regularly shares best practices and recommendations with industry professionals, policy makers, and the public to accelerate adoption and change, ending forced labor faster.
❋ Incubates technological advancement
The council’s work guide’s Free Human’s reinvestment strategy, helping put energy and resources into the technologies that will make a real difference in the fight against trafficking and exploitation.
Who should apply?
Responsive solutions require empowered people and cross-disciplinary collaboration.
❋ Successful Traits
Successful members of the anti-trafficking innovation advisory board will share FHP & FHF’s commitment to open exchange, ceaseless innovation, and progress over perfection.
❋ Aligned Belief
We believe human potential is the world’s greatest natural resource, the pursuit of potential is a uniquely human experience that’s critical to the feeling of dignity, and that the outcome of that pursuit should belong to the individual.
Learn more about our principles, philosophy, mission and model here.
❋ People we collaborate with include:
Policy professionals, academics, researchers, law enforcement, policy makers, executives, business leaders in high-risk industries, survivors and people impacted by human trafficking or forced labor, supply chain experts and practitioners, tech entrepreneurs, coders, builders, philosophers, regulatory experts, CEOs and executive directors of non-profits and other service-oriented organizations, philanthropists, investors, and more. As well as people working on ancillary and related issues including, but not limited to trade, migration, criminal justice, health care, education, and foreign relations.