Contemporary Slavery
The Rhetoric of Global Human Rights Campaigns
Joel Quirk editor Annie Bunting editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cornell University Press
Published:15th May '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This volume brings together a cast of leading experts to carefully explore how the history and iconography of slavery has been invoked to support a series of government interventions, activist projects, legal instruments, and rhetorical performances. However well-intentioned these interventions might be, they nonetheless remain subject to a host of limitations and complications. Recent efforts to combat contemporary slavery are too often sensationalist, self-serving, and superficial and, therefore, end up failing the crucial test of speaking truth to power.
The widely held notion that antislavery is one of those rare issues that "transcends" politics or ideology is only sustainable because the underlying issues at stake have been constructed and demarcated in a way that minimizes direct challenges to dominant political and economic interests. This must change. By providing an original approach to the underlying issues at stake, Contemporary Slavery will help readers understand the political practices that have been concealed beneath the popular rhetoric and establishes new conversations between scholars of slavery and trafficking and scholars of human rights and social movements.
Contributors:
Jean Allain, Jonathan Blagbrough, Roy Brooks, Annie Bunting, Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick, Andrew Crane, Rhoda Howard-Hassmann, Fuyuki Kurasawa, Benjamin Lawrance, Joel Quirk, and Darshan Vigneswaran
A must-read for every academic, practitioner, and activist working in the field of slavery and human trafficking.... It is a welcome and much-awaited contribution that, in the best-case scenario, will invite and facilitate engagement that is more academic with the issues discussed therein.
* Journal of Human TraffickiISBN: 9781501718762
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
Weight: 454g
396 pages