توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Modern Slavery Agenda: Policy, Politics and Practice
نام کتاب : The Modern Slavery Agenda: Policy, Politics and Practice
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : دستور کار برده داری مدرن: سیاست، سیاست و عمل
سری :
نویسندگان : Gary Craig (editor), Alex Balch (editor), Hannah Lewis (editor), Louise Waite (editor)
ناشر : Policy Press
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 281
ISBN (شابک) : 9781447346814
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 10 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
THE MODERN SLAVERY AGENDA\nDedication\nContents\nList of tables, figures and boxes\n Introduction\n Is modern slavery either ‘modern’ or ‘slavery’?\n International action against slavery\n ‘Modern slavery’ in the UK: developing understandings\n1. Modern slavery in global context: ending the political economy of forced labour and slavery\n Introduction\n The constituent elements of slavery\n The political economies of slavery\n Slavery and the rule of international law\n The state we are in\n Transforming the global political economy\n Conclusion\n2. The UK’s response to modern slavery: law, policy and politics\n Research and policy: key influences\n The criminalisation of human trafficking, forced labour, slavery and servitude\n The development of a human rights approach to modern slavery\n Implementation of policy on support and assistance to victims\n The enhancement of a regulatory response\n Development of the MSA\n Current and future concerns about the criminal justice response\n Conclusion\n3. Defeating ‘modern slavery’, reducing exploitation? The organisational and regulatory challenge\n Introduction\n Trafficking, forced labour or business and human rights?\n Joined up or papering over the cracks? Addressing labour exploitation post-MSA\n From outputs to outcomes?\n Conclusions\n4. Class Acts? A comparative analysis of modern slavery legislation across the UK\n Introduction\n Examining the Acts\n Implementation and use of the non-punishment provision\n Conclusion\n5. Child trafficking in the UK\n Introduction\n Definitions and offences\n The current picture\n Issues with data\n Identification of child victims\n Legal guardianship and issues with support\n Children at risk of going missing\n Assessing age\n Conclusion\n6. Human trafficking: addressing the symptom, not the cause\n The current policy context\n The ODW visa in practice\n Migrant domestic workers, the UK’s ODW visa, restrictions and exploitation\n Modern slavery responses: undermined by the hostile environment\n What happens to trafficked people?\n An ‘inexcusable’ lack of support\n7. Still punishing the wrong people: the criminalisation of potential trafficked cannabis gardeners\n Introduction\n Trafficking for cannabis production in the UK\n Vietnamese nationals\n The research\n Convictions of cannabis gardeners not identified as trafficked\n The punishment of cannabis gardeners informally identified as trafficked or slaves\n Conclusion\n8. Modern slavery and transparency in supply chains: the role of business\n Introduction\n What is ‘modern slavery’?\n Why is modern slavery relevant to business?\n Mandatory reporting trends: the global picture\n Voluntary reporting frameworks: the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights\n Drivers for transparency\n The risk of legal liability as a driver for good practice: recent court cases\n Key aspects of the MSA relevant to business\n The impact of the TISC provisions and the corporate response to these issues\n Act into action: the MSA in practice\n How have companies reacted otherwise to the MSA?\n Media and NGO scrutiny\n Conclusions\n9. Migrant illegality, slavery and exploitative work\n Introduction\n Creating binaries out of complexity\n Migrants, low-wage labour and exploitation\n Migrant labour exploitation, ‘illegality’ and coercion\n Migrant illegality or labour exploitation? Troubling identification, questioning solutions\n10. The UK’s approach to tackling modern slavery in a European context\n Introduction\n Law enforcement cooperation in Europe\n The rule of law and policy coherence\n Extraterritorial jurisdiction\n Conclusion\nIndex