Yes, we mean real slavery. People held against their will, forced to work and paid nothing.
Sometimes the slave holder ‘pays’ a few grains of rice to keep the slaves alive, or uses a bogus payment that the slave holder reclaims at the end of the month. But the end result is what slavery is today and has always been—one person controlling another and then forcing them to work.
Sometimes the slave holder ‘pays’ a few grains of rice to keep the slaves alive, or uses a bogus payment that the slave holder reclaims at the end of the month. But the end result is what slavery is today and has always been—one person controlling another and then forcing them to work.
Through Free the Slaves’ research, first published in Kevin Bales’
our conservative estimate is that there are 21-30 million people in
slavery today. This means that there are more people in slavery today
than at any other time in human history. Slavery has existed for
thousands of years, but changes in the world’s economy and societies
over the past 50 years have enabled a resurgence of slavery.
Three trends have contributed most to the rise of modern-slavery.
- The first, a recent population explosion has tripled the number of people in the world, with most growth taking place in the developing world.
- The second, rapid social and economic change, have displaced many to urban centers and their outskirts, where people have no ‘safety net’ and no job security.
- The third, government corruption around the world, allows slavery to go unpunished, even though it is illegal everywhere.
In this way millions have become vulnerable to slave holders and
human traffickers looking to profit through the theft of people’s lives.
This new slavery has two prime characteristics: slaves today are cheap
and they are disposable.
Cheap, Disposable People
- An average slave in the American South in 1850 cost the equivalent of $40,000 in today’s money; today a slave costs an average of $90.
- In 1850 it was difficult to capture a slave and then transport them to the US. Today, millions of economically and socially vulnerable people around the world are potential slaves.
This “supply” makes slaves today cheaper than they have ever been.
Since they are so cheap, slaves are today are not considered a major
investment worth maintaining. If slaves get sick, are injured, outlive
their usefulness, or become troublesome to the slaveholder, they are
dumped or killed. For most slave holders, actually legally ‘owning’ the
slave is an inconvenience since they already exert total control over
the individuals labor and profits. Who needs a legal document that could
at some point be used against the slave holder? Today the slave holder
cares more about these high profits than whether the holder and slave
are of different ethnic backgrounds; in New Slavery, profit trumps skin
color. Finally, new slavery is directly connected to the global economy.
As in the past, most slaves are forced to work in agriculture, mining,
and prostitution. From these sectors, their exploited labor flows into
the global economy, and into our lives.
How does slavery affect us?
- Since slavery feeds directly into the global economy, it makes sense
that we would be concerned by the ways in which slavery flows into our
homes through the products we buy and the investments we make. Slaves
harvest cocoa in the Ivory Coast, make charcoal used to produce steel in
Brazil, weave carpets in India—the list goes on. These products reach
our stores and our homes.
In addition, there may be people held in slavery in your community.
Slavery happens in nearly every country in the world, and the US and
Europe are not immune. Research that Free the Slaves conducted with the
University of California, Berkeley found documented cases of slavery and
human trafficking in more than 90 cities across the United States. To
learn about the warning signs of slavery and what you can do to combat
slavery in your community
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