Again, we draw our inspiration from what has worked internationally.
One of our projects dealt with young people who were told that they were going to go and get a job in the big city. In Cameroon we started to work on a program to set up a safe community network. There was one person on one end--if they didn't have family, that one person would be a trusted member of the community, or a social worker--and there was someone else on the other end. So you're going to work in the city? Okay. But we have someone at the other end who's going to make sure that when you get there, you do end up doing what you signed up for. That someone checks up on the individual. So this actually is a very unique model that could work.
Now, a little less intensive and an easier, more achievable step would be information. These young women need to know that if it smells like a rat, it probably is. They need to know what questions they should ask. And there are questions they can ask that will allow them to find out if they are in fact getting into something they didn't bargain for.