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How can innovators leverage technology to improve and scale resources for survivors of modern slavery?

Supporting Survivors of Modern Slavery Challenge

Closed

Submissions are closed

Timeline

  • Applications Open

    May 1, 2024 9:00am EDT
  • Solution Deadline

    July 8, 2024 1:00pm EDT
  • Challenge Close [Extended Deadline!]

    July 8, 2024 1:00pm EDT
  • Solution Review

    July 22, 2024 11:59pm EDT
  • Semi-Finalists Under Review

    August 5, 2024 11:59pm EDT
  • Finalists Under Review

    September 8, 2024 11:59pm EDT

Challenge Overview

Over 50 million people are trapped in modern slavery worldwide, with women and children disproportionately affected. One in three human trafficking victims are children under the age of 18. While survivors include individuals of all ages and backgrounds, exploitation is more prevalent among migrants and those with lower socioeconomic status. Eighty percent of survivors are re-victimized if they do not have a safe place to go. While many groups are working to educate about and mitigate the risks of modern slavery and forced labor, improved solutions to provide resources and access to support are needed for survivors to thrive in society. 

Survivors of modern slavery face tremendous challenges in their efforts to rebuild their lives including alienation, lack of basic documents, and limited access to financial resources, shelter, and viable employment opportunities. Ethically designed and deployed technology, such as AI, has the potential to enable greater efficiencies, increase impact, and drive better solutions to the world’s most complex challenges. Yet, there is still a lack of support for scalable and tech-focused solutions and the organizations that provide services to survivors of modern slavery. 

Organizations across the world are innovatively leveraging technology and scaling resources to support survivors of modern slavery as they rebuild their lives and reintegrate into society – resources such as bank accounts and credit, affordable housing, childcare, trauma-informed health care, and career placement. We know that effective change requires not just support for individual solutions, but support for a thriving ecosystem of innovators united in a common purpose. 

This Challenge seeks exceptional solutions for and by survivors that leverage ethical technology – like AI – to improve and scale critical resources by: 

  • Bettering existing resources for legal, financial, physical, psychological, and social well-being  

  • Improving access to, and awareness of, critical survivor resources 

  • Strengthening the ecosystem of providers by enhancing efficiencies in communication, data collection and sharing, and coordination 

  • Training and supporting existing organizations and agencies in ways to reach out to and appropriately work with survivors.

FAQs

Table of Contents

Info Session Recording

How does the Challenge define key terminology such as human trafficking, forced labor, and modern slavery?

Who can apply to the Challenge?

What types of solutions are eligible?

How does Solve define technology?

What are HPE Foundation’s AI ethical principles, and how will these be considered for applications using AI?

How will my solution be evaluated?

What is the Challenge timeline?

What will I receive if my solution is selected?

Will my solution be publicly viewable?

Will the intellectual property rights of applicants, as it pertains to their solution submissions, be protected by MIT Solve?



How does the Challenge define key terminology such as human trafficking, forced labor, and modern slavery? 

Human trafficking: HPE recognizes that modern slavery can take many forms, including forced labor and marriage, bonded labor, and human trafficking. HPE uses the ILO’s definitions of forced labor and human trafficking in its policies and programs, and therefore may use the terms “forced labor,” “bonded labor,” or “human trafficking” in addition to “slavery” or “modern slavery” in reference to this Challenge. 

Who can apply to the Challenge? 

We invite submissions from individuals, teams, and/or organizations. We especially encourage and welcome applications from survivors or those with lived experience of or proximity to human trafficking/modern slavery. 

  • Solutions can be for-profit, nonprofit, or hybrid models and must be at least at the prototype stage.  

  • Per MIT Solve’s Terms of Service, US law prevents MIT Solve from accepting applications from people who are ordinarily resident in Iran, Cuba, Syria, North Korea, or the Crimea, Donetsk People’s Republic, or Luhansk People’s Republic areas of Ukraine. Applications from people in Venezuela, Belarus, China (including Hong Kong), Saudi Arabia, and Russia will undergo legal review and may be removed from the website if US law prevents MIT Solve from accepting them. 

What types of solutions are eligible? 

This Challenge seeks innovative, human-centered, tech-based solutions. We are looking for a diverse portfolio of solutions across geography, development stage, and team members’ gender and background. 

Solution applications must be written in English. The Challenge considers solutions at various stages of development.  Concept-stage solutions will not be reviewed or selected. We define a Concept-stage solution as an idea being explored and researched for its feasibility to build a product, service, or business model, including prototypes under development. Until the solution has a functioning prototype, we would still consider it a Concept. 

  • Prototype: An initial working version of a solution that may be in the process of getting initial feedback or testing with users (i.e. running a pilot). If for-profit, a solution that has raised little or no investment capital. Until the solution transitions from testing to consistent availability, we would still consider it a Prototype. (Often 0 users/direct beneficiaries) 

  • Pilot: The solution has been launched in at least one community, but is still iterating on design or business model. If for-profit, is generally working to gain traction and may have completed a fundraising round with investment capital. (Often 10+ users/direct beneficiaries) 

  • Growth: An established solution available in one or more communities with a consistent design and approach, ready for further growth in multiple communities or countries. If for-profit, has generally completed at least one formal investment round (Seed stage or later). If nonprofit, has an established set of donors and/or revenue streams. 

  • Scale: A standard solution operating in many communities or multiple countries and is prepared to scale significantly by improving efficiency. If for-profit, has likely raised at least a Series A investment round. 

How does Solve define technology? 

We define technology broadly as the application of science and evidence-based knowledge to the practical aims of human life.  We welcome solutions that are using apps, SMS technology, software, AI, robots, drones, blockchain, and virtual reality! We also welcome solutions that are leveraging traditional, ancestral, and natural technologies and knowledge systems.

While the challenge is open broadly to those leveraging technology, we especially welcome AI-native solutions, AI-enabled solutions, or solutions that can be transformed with AI integration.

What are HPE Foundation’s AI ethical principles, and how will these be considered for applications using AI? 

An application question specific to those utilizing AI will ask applicants to explain how they are ensuring ethical and responsible AI use.  

How will my solution be evaluated? 

The judging panel for this Challenge will be composed of a diverse array of leaders and experts. After an initial screening and review by Solve and the HPE Foundation staff and community reviewers, ~10 solutions will move forward as finalists. These finalists will be invited to pitch their solutions at a virtual pitch event, where judges will then select the ~5 winners. Judges will score the screened solutions based on the following criteria. All criteria will be given equal weight: 

  • Alignment: The solution uses technology to address the challenge and one or more Challenge dimensions 

  • Potential for Impact: The planned solution implementation has the potential to impact the intended population. 

  • Feasibility: The team has a realistic, practical plan for implementing the solution, and it is feasible in the given context. 

  • Innovative Approach: The solution includes a new technology, a new application of technology, a new business model, or a new process for solving the Challenge. 

  • Inclusive Human-Centered Design: Inclusive and equitable outcomes are considered in the design, implementation, and internal operations of the solution. 

  • Scalability: The solution has a plan for financial viability and the potential to be scaled to affect the lives of more people. 

  • Partnership Potential: The applicant clearly explains how the solution would benefit from the broad range of resources that the Solve, the HPE Foundation, and The Anti-Slavery Collective community is positioned to provide. 

What is the Challenge timeline? 

  • Challenge Opens for Submissions: May 1, 2024 

  • Challenge Closes for Submission: July 8, 2024 [Extended deadline!]

  • Finalist Selection Announcement: by August 16, 2024 

  • Finalist Preparation with Solve Staff: August 16 - September 2, 2024

  • Virtual Finalist Pitch & Interview Days: September 5 & 6, 2024

  • Winner Selection Announcement: September 23, 2024, at Solve Challenge Finals 

  • Winner Support Program: October 2024 - March 2025  

*While we aim to follow the schedule above, the following dates are subject to change. Applicants will be notified if changes occur.  

What will I receive if my solution is selected? 

Finalists will be invited to a virtual pitch event to present their solutions in front of distinguished judges. A total pool of $300,000 in funding is available for up to 5 winners of the Challenge. This funding will be disbursed as follows: $75,000 each to 2 grand prize winners, and $50,000 each to 3 runner-up prize winners.  

In addition to funding, each Challenge winner will participate in a 6-month support program run by MIT Solve in collaboration with the HPE Foundation and The Anti-Slavery Collective. Selected teams should expect to commit ~20 hours to the program, which includes the following: 

  • In-kind resources curated to support entrepreneurs across critical areas including pro bono legal support, software licenses, and marketing 

  • Virtual orientation session 

  • Virtual cohort convenings during the support program period 

  • Virtual check-in meetings between Solve staff with each winner  

  • Professional executive leadership coaching for winners 

  • Virtual capacity building workshops hosted by experts focused on potential topics such as Participatory Design, Theory of Change, Impact Metrics, or other themes 

  • Connections to expertise from global networks 

Will my solution be publicly viewable? 

Yes, when you hit submit, your solution will be published on Solve’s site. If you are concerned about protecting proprietary information about your solution, either because you have patents pending or for other reasons, you should only share what you feel comfortable sharing within the public domain. You can successfully answer the application questions while including only those technical details you feel comfortable sharing and are able to confidentially share technical information in more depth at later stages of our application process. 

Will the intellectual property rights of applicants, as it pertains to their solution submissions, be protected by MIT Solve?  

Your contributions are yours. Those who post information or materials on this website (the “Materials”) retain rights to their own work while giving us the right to distribute their work, and others the right to use the work with appropriate citation under the CC-BY-NC-SA license. Others’ work is not yours. You agree not to upload Materials to this website that you do not own or are not specifically authorized to use. You also agree to appropriately attribute references to works and ideas created by third parties, including other users of this website. 

In order to upload content on this website, you must grant the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (“MIT”) a non-exclusive right to use the Materials. Unless specifically noted, all Materials on the website will be made available to third parties under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License. You can review Solve’s full Terms of Service here.

Judging Criteria

  • Alignment: The solution uses technology to address the Challenge and one or more of the Challenge dimensions.
  • Potential for Impact: The planned solution implementation has the potential to impact the intended population.
  • Feasibility: The team has a realistic, practical plan for implementing the solution, and it is feasible in the given context.
  • Innovative Approach: The solution includes a new technology, a new application of technology, a new business model, or a new process for solving the Challenge.
  • Inclusive Human-Centered Design: Inclusive and equitable outcomes are considered in the design, implementation, and internal operations of the solution.
  • Scalability: The solution has a plan for financial viability and the potential to be scaled to affect the lives of more people.
  • Partnership Potential: The applicant clearly explains how the solution would benefit from the broad range of resources that the Solve, the HPE Foundation, and The Anti-Slavery Collective community is positioned to provide.

Solutions

Selected

Story Mobile App

By Jessica Minhas
Jessica Minhas
Selected

Golden Dreams

By Lisa Rende Taylor
Lisa Rende Taylor Ana Maria  Soto Bernal
Selected

EverFree’s Freedom Lifemap

By Kelsey Morgan
Kelsey Morgan Hailey Barth
Selected

HT Fusion Center

By Rochelle Keyhan
Rochelle  Keyhan
Selected

ALIGHT: Mobilizing Justice

By Marianna Kosharovsky
Marianna Kosharovsky
Finalist

AttAIn

By Quintin Lake
Quintin Lake Phillip Clayton
Finalist

Mending Circle (MeCi)

By Tinia Apergi
Tinia Apergi Theo Theoharis
Finalist

SAFEHELP AI-POWERED APP

By Chioma Favour Uzoma
Chioma Favour  Uzoma Favour Ogedegbe Esther Amos Uchechi Ude
Finalist

AnnieCannons

By Laura Hackney
Laura Hackney
Finalist

Infrared

By Allison Cohen
Allison Cohen
Finalist

GLOW

By Diep Vuong
Diep Vuong
Submitted

Chatbot Sophia

By Rhiana Spring
Rhiana Spring
Submitted

Hybrid Survivor Support System

By Alemneh Tadele
Alemneh Tadele
Submitted

Justice Equality & Empowerment

By Smeeta K
Smeeta K Wally Meets Hari Suvarchala G Jeanny Lee Vanlalruat  Guite Neeta Khandalkar
Submitted

Pathways to Freedom

By Rantiade Idahosa
Rantiade Idahosa

Judges

Andrew Wallis

Andrew Wallis

Unseen, Chief Executive Officer
Adriana-Eufrosina Bora

Adriana-Eufrosina Bora

Mila - Quebec AI Institute & QUT - Queensland University of Technology, Project AIMS (AI against Modern Slavery) Lead
Mariam Onyachi

Mariam Onyachi

Azadi Community, Program Manager, Survivor Leadership and Advocacy Portfolio
Phil Bennett

Phil Bennett

Independent Anti-trafficking Technology Consultant
Hasina Kharbhih

Hasina Kharbhih

Impulse NGO Network, Founder & Chairperson
Eugenie

Eugenie

The Anti-Slavery Collective, Co-Founder
Julia de Boinville

Julia de Boinville

The Anti-Slavery Collective, Co-Founder
Jason Newman

Jason Newman

Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Vice President, Corporate Affairs
Rosi Orozco

Rosi Orozco

Kaleido Inc, Former Congresswoman & Volunteer
Ryan Berg

Ryan Berg

Aruna Project, Co-Founder & CEO
Philippa Southwell

Philippa Southwell

Southwell & Partners, Modern Slavery Lawyer + Managing Director
Jasmine O'Connor

Jasmine O'Connor

Anti-Slavery International, CEO
Taina Bien-Aimé

Taina Bien-Aimé

Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, Executive Director