Consumers are the new activists in the fight against modern slavery, with awareness campaigns urging citizens to use their consumer power to demand an end to labour exploitation. The contribution of political, or ethical, consumerism campaigns to the trafficking narrative is examined in this article through an analysis of the characterisation of consumers and corporations in campaigns from SlaveryFootprint.org, Stop the Traffik UK, and World Vision Australia. This article argues that campaigns urging political consumerism depict consumers as the heroic rescuers of enslaved victims, and embed solutions to modern slavery within a culture of unquestioned capitalism. This approach may have the unintended consequence of sidelining victims from t...
There is a small, but growing, social scientific literature on the racist and violent nature of cont...
Recent evidence published by the European Commission suggests that the number of workers who are sen...
We live in an age of extreme corporate concentration, in which global industries are controlled by j...
Over the last three decades, welfare states across the West have embraced a host of new technologies...
Since the events of 9/11 in the US in 2001 and, four years later, the 7/7 London bombings in the UK,...
If the quality of democracy is to be measured by the extent to which it constrains the economically ...
The UK has traditionally exerted significant influence on the global human rights agenda through dip...
Academics debate the positive and negative consequences of hosting sports mega-events, and although ...
This article develops a critical engagement with the politics of British satire. After first engagin...
ArticleThis is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.The potential impa...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
This thesis is an ethnographic examination of the social role that money plays in the lives of Ghana...
There is a small, but growing, social scientific literature on the racist and violent nature of cont...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
Purpose Reports of human trafficking within the football industry have become a topic of academic, ...
There is a small, but growing, social scientific literature on the racist and violent nature of cont...
Recent evidence published by the European Commission suggests that the number of workers who are sen...
We live in an age of extreme corporate concentration, in which global industries are controlled by j...
Over the last three decades, welfare states across the West have embraced a host of new technologies...
Since the events of 9/11 in the US in 2001 and, four years later, the 7/7 London bombings in the UK,...
If the quality of democracy is to be measured by the extent to which it constrains the economically ...
The UK has traditionally exerted significant influence on the global human rights agenda through dip...
Academics debate the positive and negative consequences of hosting sports mega-events, and although ...
This article develops a critical engagement with the politics of British satire. After first engagin...
ArticleThis is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.The potential impa...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
This thesis is an ethnographic examination of the social role that money plays in the lives of Ghana...
There is a small, but growing, social scientific literature on the racist and violent nature of cont...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
Purpose Reports of human trafficking within the football industry have become a topic of academic, ...
There is a small, but growing, social scientific literature on the racist and violent nature of cont...
Recent evidence published by the European Commission suggests that the number of workers who are sen...
We live in an age of extreme corporate concentration, in which global industries are controlled by j...