An increasing number of jobs are precarious, making workers vulnerable to various forms of ill-treatment and exploitation. The UK Government’s main approach has been to criminalise the actions of unscrupulous employers who seek to exploit these. This approach, however, has been ineffective, partly because it ignores the broader socio-economic structures that place workers in conditions of vulnerability. This article develops an alternative solution, seeking to identify structures that force and trap workers in conditions of exploitation. It focuses specifically on what I call ‘state-mediated structural injustice', where legislative schemes that promote otherwise legitimate aims create vulnerabilities that force and trap workers in condition...
The human right to just and favourable working conditions offers a promising way of articulating the...
This article introduces a special issue on economic systems and everyday abuses of labour rights. In...
PhD (Perspectives on Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusThe abolition of forced labour...
This article examines United Kingdom overseas domestic worker and diplomatic domestic worker visas i...
Migrant workers working in low-skilled, low-paid jobs frequently fall victim to labour market abuses...
Research on combating forced labour has largely focused on measures taken by the government and the ...
This article examines the link between restrictive immigration schemes, specifically ‘tied visas’ an...
Forced labour is a serious crime that currently affects thousands of people across the UK -- and the...
The term ‘modern slavery’ constitutes a broad non-legal umbrella term that refers to a range of abu...
The vast majority of asylum seekers and irregular migrants in Britain are forbidden from working, ho...
This paper focuses on labour within immigration detention in the United Kingdom, offering an origina...
This article examines the relationship between human rights and labour law. It first explores the re...
The UK Modern Slavery Bill, and UK politicians’ obsession with immigration, risk undermining politic...
Yes, it’s true: Workers are human, they are not commodities, they are not factors of production. Peo...
This article examines the dilemmas facing trade unions seeking to engage on questions of forced labo...
The human right to just and favourable working conditions offers a promising way of articulating the...
This article introduces a special issue on economic systems and everyday abuses of labour rights. In...
PhD (Perspectives on Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusThe abolition of forced labour...
This article examines United Kingdom overseas domestic worker and diplomatic domestic worker visas i...
Migrant workers working in low-skilled, low-paid jobs frequently fall victim to labour market abuses...
Research on combating forced labour has largely focused on measures taken by the government and the ...
This article examines the link between restrictive immigration schemes, specifically ‘tied visas’ an...
Forced labour is a serious crime that currently affects thousands of people across the UK -- and the...
The term ‘modern slavery’ constitutes a broad non-legal umbrella term that refers to a range of abu...
The vast majority of asylum seekers and irregular migrants in Britain are forbidden from working, ho...
This paper focuses on labour within immigration detention in the United Kingdom, offering an origina...
This article examines the relationship between human rights and labour law. It first explores the re...
The UK Modern Slavery Bill, and UK politicians’ obsession with immigration, risk undermining politic...
Yes, it’s true: Workers are human, they are not commodities, they are not factors of production. Peo...
This article examines the dilemmas facing trade unions seeking to engage on questions of forced labo...
The human right to just and favourable working conditions offers a promising way of articulating the...
This article introduces a special issue on economic systems and everyday abuses of labour rights. In...
PhD (Perspectives on Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusThe abolition of forced labour...