In the last five years, we have seen a rebranding of global anti-trafficking efforts as ‘modern-day slavery’ abolitionism. The United States of America (US) Department of State and powerful philanthropists are key proponents of the slavery makeover, prompting other governments, international organisations, and non-governmental organisations alike to adopt the ‘modern-day slavery’ frame. The slavery frame has helped ignite outrage and galvanise political support for modern anti-slavery campaigns. It has also helped expand the anti-trafficking spotlight beyond the sex sector to expose the extreme exploitation that men, women, and children suffer in the non-sexual labour sectors of our global economy. These benefits come at a cost, however, bo...
The United Nations (UN) Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially ...
Every year, hundreds of thousands of people in the world are exploited through human trafficking. Th...
In my view, the answer to the debate question of whether it is necessary to distinguish between forc...
When politicians, responding to public campaigns focused on human trafficking, make bold and over-em...
Trafficking in Anti-blackness shows how global campaigns to end human trafficking employ the memory ...
We can spend a lot of time debating the connections or essential differences between the concepts of...
Trafficking in Anti-blackness shows how global campaigns to end human trafficking employ the memory ...
The Trafficking Protocol[1] has shaped and advanced a global movement against human trafficking; not...
Response to the ATR debate proposition ‘It is worth undermining the anti-trafficking cause in order ...
Government Since slavery has been made illegal in nearly all countries in the world, and as modern a...
Response to ATR Debate Proposition: ‘Prosecuting trafficking deflects attention from much more impor...
Response to the ATR debate proposition ‘It is worth undermining the anti-trafficking cause in order ...
The fact that the United Nations (UN) Trafficking Protocol is not an autochthonous product of the Br...
[Abstract] Slavery is a more rapid and technical “game” than ever before in the world’s history. Com...
Over the last decades much progress has been made in the fight against human trafficking. As with an...
The United Nations (UN) Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially ...
Every year, hundreds of thousands of people in the world are exploited through human trafficking. Th...
In my view, the answer to the debate question of whether it is necessary to distinguish between forc...
When politicians, responding to public campaigns focused on human trafficking, make bold and over-em...
Trafficking in Anti-blackness shows how global campaigns to end human trafficking employ the memory ...
We can spend a lot of time debating the connections or essential differences between the concepts of...
Trafficking in Anti-blackness shows how global campaigns to end human trafficking employ the memory ...
The Trafficking Protocol[1] has shaped and advanced a global movement against human trafficking; not...
Response to the ATR debate proposition ‘It is worth undermining the anti-trafficking cause in order ...
Government Since slavery has been made illegal in nearly all countries in the world, and as modern a...
Response to ATR Debate Proposition: ‘Prosecuting trafficking deflects attention from much more impor...
Response to the ATR debate proposition ‘It is worth undermining the anti-trafficking cause in order ...
The fact that the United Nations (UN) Trafficking Protocol is not an autochthonous product of the Br...
[Abstract] Slavery is a more rapid and technical “game” than ever before in the world’s history. Com...
Over the last decades much progress has been made in the fight against human trafficking. As with an...
The United Nations (UN) Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially ...
Every year, hundreds of thousands of people in the world are exploited through human trafficking. Th...
In my view, the answer to the debate question of whether it is necessary to distinguish between forc...