Past studies have indicated that the British public consider human trafficking to be remote from their personal experiences. However, an increase in local press reporting, alongside the emergence of locally co-ordinated anti-modern slavery campaigns, is starting to encourage communities to recognise the potential for modern slavery and human trafficking to exist in their own localities. In this article, we examine how local media and campaigns may be influencing public perceptions of modern slavery and human trafficking. We draw upon a content analysis of local newspapers to review how reports represent cases of modern slavery, and use focus group discussions to understand how local coverage modifies—and sometimes reinforces—existing views....
Trafficking in Anti-blackness shows how global campaigns to end human trafficking employ the memory ...
Competing representations of human trafficking in the media and within the movement have contributed...
This article argues that little has changed over the past 130 years when it comes to negative repres...
Past studies have indicated that the British public consider human trafficking to be remote from the...
Modern slavery is less overt than historical state-sanctioned slavery because psychological abuse is...
Modern slavery is less overt than historical state-sanctioned slavery because psychological abuse is...
This article provides a commentary on growing awareness of human trafficking to and within the Unite...
This article provides a commentary on growing awareness of human trafficking to and within the Unite...
Modern slavery has received somewhat limited attention in social policy. Partially responding to thi...
This issue of the Anti-Trafficking Review is concerned with some of the histories that created, and ...
Representations of trafficking and forced labour are pervasive within media, policymaking, and human...
This article explores how UK media narratives construct sexual exploitation of British children as a...
This article explores the figure of the ‘migrant slave’ that appears to conjoin antithetical notions...
A term as morally and politically loaded as ‘modern day slave trade’ inevitably provokes strong and ...
This article offers an original contribution to the field of victimization studies by investigating ...
Trafficking in Anti-blackness shows how global campaigns to end human trafficking employ the memory ...
Competing representations of human trafficking in the media and within the movement have contributed...
This article argues that little has changed over the past 130 years when it comes to negative repres...
Past studies have indicated that the British public consider human trafficking to be remote from the...
Modern slavery is less overt than historical state-sanctioned slavery because psychological abuse is...
Modern slavery is less overt than historical state-sanctioned slavery because psychological abuse is...
This article provides a commentary on growing awareness of human trafficking to and within the Unite...
This article provides a commentary on growing awareness of human trafficking to and within the Unite...
Modern slavery has received somewhat limited attention in social policy. Partially responding to thi...
This issue of the Anti-Trafficking Review is concerned with some of the histories that created, and ...
Representations of trafficking and forced labour are pervasive within media, policymaking, and human...
This article explores how UK media narratives construct sexual exploitation of British children as a...
This article explores the figure of the ‘migrant slave’ that appears to conjoin antithetical notions...
A term as morally and politically loaded as ‘modern day slave trade’ inevitably provokes strong and ...
This article offers an original contribution to the field of victimization studies by investigating ...
Trafficking in Anti-blackness shows how global campaigns to end human trafficking employ the memory ...
Competing representations of human trafficking in the media and within the movement have contributed...
This article argues that little has changed over the past 130 years when it comes to negative repres...