While research has examined the plight of vulnerable workers, the role of consumers who drive demand for slave-based services and products has been largely neglected. This is an important gap given both historical evidence of the effectiveness of 18th and 19th century anti-slavery consumer activism and recent attempts to regulate slavery through harnessing consumer power, such as the UK’s Modern Slavery Act 2015. This article draws on data from in-depth interviews with 40 consumers, to identify their understanding of modern slavery, before revealing the neutralising and legitimising techniques they use to justify their (in)action. Our findings contribute to, and extend, neutralisation theory by exploring its applicability in this unique con...
‘Modern slavery’, a term used to describe severe forms of labour exploitation, is beginning to spark...
More than 50 million people in the world are estimated to be in a situation of modern slavery, the m...
Modern slavery challenges our traditional approaches to business and business research. It questions...
While research has examined the plight of vulnerable workers, the role of consumers who drive demand...
Modern slavery has received somewhat limited attention in social policy. Partially responding to thi...
This paper focuses on the modern slavery statements of three major UK high street retailers who are ...
Research on combating forced labour has largely focused on measures taken by the government and the ...
This article shows how the ethical framing of the contemporary issue of modern slavery has evolved i...
Slavery is not over; and even though society condemns it, slave labour continues to be used in vario...
Notwithstanding the 19th century formal abolition of slavery as legal ownership of people, modern sl...
The research has been conducted to fill an information and policy gap around the business demand for...
Despite growing attention from companies and regulators looking to eradicate modern slavery, we know...
The term ‘modern slavery’ constitutes a broad non-legal umbrella term that refers to a range of abu...
Purpose: To examine how organisations report on the detection and remediation of modern slavery in t...
This article sets the context to this special issue: it discusses the background to the UK Modern Sl...
‘Modern slavery’, a term used to describe severe forms of labour exploitation, is beginning to spark...
More than 50 million people in the world are estimated to be in a situation of modern slavery, the m...
Modern slavery challenges our traditional approaches to business and business research. It questions...
While research has examined the plight of vulnerable workers, the role of consumers who drive demand...
Modern slavery has received somewhat limited attention in social policy. Partially responding to thi...
This paper focuses on the modern slavery statements of three major UK high street retailers who are ...
Research on combating forced labour has largely focused on measures taken by the government and the ...
This article shows how the ethical framing of the contemporary issue of modern slavery has evolved i...
Slavery is not over; and even though society condemns it, slave labour continues to be used in vario...
Notwithstanding the 19th century formal abolition of slavery as legal ownership of people, modern sl...
The research has been conducted to fill an information and policy gap around the business demand for...
Despite growing attention from companies and regulators looking to eradicate modern slavery, we know...
The term ‘modern slavery’ constitutes a broad non-legal umbrella term that refers to a range of abu...
Purpose: To examine how organisations report on the detection and remediation of modern slavery in t...
This article sets the context to this special issue: it discusses the background to the UK Modern Sl...
‘Modern slavery’, a term used to describe severe forms of labour exploitation, is beginning to spark...
More than 50 million people in the world are estimated to be in a situation of modern slavery, the m...
Modern slavery challenges our traditional approaches to business and business research. It questions...