COLLABORATING ON PURPOSE
What is collaboration? What does it look like? What are its outcomes, specifically in the anti-trafficking field? As first responders, how can you best facilitate multi-disciplinary collaboration within your organization to effect positive outcomes in cases of human trafficking?
These questions and more will be explored and answered during this presentation which was created and narrated by Douglas Gilmer, Ph.D., based on his first-hand experiences and focused research on this topic.
These questions and more will be explored and answered during this presentation which was created and narrated by Douglas Gilmer, Ph.D., based on his first-hand experiences and focused research on this topic.
-
68 learners
Enrolled -
1 hour
Video duration -
-
Doug Gilmer, Ph.D.
Dr. Doug Gilmer is a 35+ year law enforcement veteran with the last 25 spent serving the Department of Homeland Security. He finished his career as the Senior Advisor and Senior Law Enforcement Liaison at the Department of Homeland Security’s Center for Countering Human Trafficking (CCHT) in Washington, DC. Prior to this role, he served in a variety of management, supervisory, investigative, and operational positions within Homeland Security Investigations. Doug is a dedicated defender of human rights and fighter against crimes such as human trafficking and child exploitation with his work beginning even before the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 was enacted. Doug is passionate about building and equipping teams to effectively combat these crimes, assisting victims and holding offenders accountable. Doug is a member of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), serving on its Victim Services Committee. He is in high demand across the country as a speaker, lecturer, and trainer to law enforcement, churches, faith-based organizations, college campuses, and communities.
Doug is the Founder & President of Resolved Strategies, LLC, a global justice solutions group, helping connect organization with the relationships, resources, technology, and training they need while also helping build collaborative, multidisciplinary teams, to effectively address various forms of human exploitation around the world.