Abstract

ABSTRACT There is growing interest in the use of community-based approaches to address the causes of modern slavery and the related goal of building anti-slavery ‘resilience.’ However, the concept of resilience is often poorly understood and applied without attention to the specific challenges of anti-slavery policy and practice. This paper provides a conceptual framework for understanding the process and outcomes of building resilience against contemporary forms of slavery within place-based communities. Inspired by established ecological models of resilience, we propose an adaptive ‘resilience cycle’ that activists and policymakers can draw upon to inform the process of designing and delivering policy interventions. This process is combined with a review of evidence about the multi-level social determinants of modern slavery to suggest a framework of topic areas for local review and measurement, as a means to assess existing gaps and assets, enable comparative learning, and measure progress toward goals. We also outline a future research agenda exploring locally grounded perspectives on modern slavery risk and resilience, to improve understanding of the factors underpinning resilience across different social and economic contexts. This article will assist policy-makers by clarifying the concept of anti-slavery resilience, which can in turn inform policy design and implementation, and help to make connections between disparate initiatives from multiple actors. By combining a process for building resilience with an overview of social determinants underpinning a slavery-free community, we offer a basis for gap-analysis and ongoing measurement. The research agenda that we outline to better understand factors underpinning resilience would make a valuable contribution to improving anti-slavery governance and assist in developing a better understanding of the linkages between achieving Sustainable Development Goal target 8.7 1 1 Take immediate and effective measures to eradicate forced labour, end modern slavery and human trafficking and secure the prohibition and elimination of the worst forms of child labour, including recruitment and use of child soldiers, and by 2025 end child labour in all its forms. and wider sustainable development goals.

Highlights

  • There is growing interest in the use of community-based approaches to address the causes of modern slavery and the related goal of building antislavery ‘resilience.’ the concept of resilience is often poorly under­ stood and applied without attention to the specific challenges of anti-slavery policy and practice

  • This process is combined with a review of evidence about the multi-level social determi­ nants of modern slavery to suggest a framework of topic areas for local review and measurement, as a means to assess existing gaps and assets, enable comparative learning, and measure progress toward goals

  • By combining a process for building resilience with an overview of social determinants underpinning a slavery-free community, we offer a basis for gap-analysis and ongoing measurement

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Summary

Journal of Human Trafficking

To cite this article: Alison Gardner , Phil Northall & Ben Brewster (2020): Building Slavery-free Communities: A Resilience Framework, Journal of Human Trafficking, DOI: 10.1080/23322705.2020.1777828 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/23322705.2020.1777828 Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=uhmt20

Diagnosis of Problems and Potential Solutions
Challenging Hierarchies and Systems
Changing Cultural and Institutional Landscapes
Normalize and Sustain Practice
Identifying the Social Determinants of Contemporary Slavery
Structural Factors
Legal and Regulatory Factors
Culture and Locality
Findings
Operationalizing Community Resilience as a Means to Address Contemporary Slavery
Full Text
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