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ANTI-SLAVERY INTERNATIONAL

Part 2: Publications and Reports of Anti-Slavery International and predecessors, 1880-1979

Anti-Slavery International is the world's oldest international human rights organisation. It campaigns for the elimination of slavery around the world, lobbying governments and intergovernmental organisations to develop and implement anti-slavery legislation and supports local organisations in their work to raise awareness of this human rights abuse.

Slavery is not a marginal issue. Anti-Slavery estimates 27 million women, children and men around the world are enslaved in:

- Bonded labour - A person becomes bonded when his/her labour is demanded as repayment for a loan. Worldwide, millions of bonded labourers are caught in a cycle of debt and forced to work in conditions that violate their human rights.
- Forced and early marriage - Women and girls who are married without choice and forced into a life of servitude and often physical violence.
- Forced labour - Often associated with government or paramilitary coercion, it affects women and children captured as booty in Sudan to political prisoners and minorities in Burma to exploited migrant workers in numerous Western countries.
- Human trafficking - Traffickers use violence, threats, and other forms of coercion or deception to force their victims to work against their will. This includes controlling their freedom of movement, where and when they will work and what pay, if any, they will receive.
- Traditional slavery - People are still bought and sold as commodities. They are often abducted from their homes, inherited or given as gifts.
- Worst forms of child labour - Children working in conditions hazardous to their mental and physical health. At the worst end of the spectrum are child slaves.

Slavery exists on all continents and most countries. Anti-Slavery has documented it in a wide number of countries including Australia, Benin, Bolivia, Bosnia, Burma, Brazil, Chile, China, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Great Britain, India, Italy, Jamaica, Mauritania, Morocco, Nepal, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, Sudan, Thailand and the United States of America.

In 1950 Anti-Slavery was granted consultative status by the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) and, after 18 years of campaigning, in 1975 persuaded the United Nations Commission on Human Rights to establish a Working Group on Contemporary Forms of Slavery. It regularly contributes to these forums, preparing statements and reports for the UN Commission on Human Rights and its related bodies. In 1985 it was asked to submit reports on child slavery to UNICEF and in 1987 the Australian government asked them to report on the status of aborigines (in 1909 Anti-Slavery merged with the Aborigines' Protection Society). This material will be of particular interest to libraries in Australia and all those interested in native land rights. The governments of Brazil and Sudan have also called upon the organisation's help and expertise in the past.

Anti-Slavery collects information on modern slavery, raising politicians' awareness of the issue as well as that of the press and public, promoting action to eradicate such abuses. This project makes available a mass of material that libraries will otherwise find extremely difficult to acquire.

Part 2 provides a broader context for the current debate on slavery by looking at the issues that have been discussed over the past one hundred years. The connections between Empire and Slavery are made abundantly clear with many case studies of human rights abuses in the outposts of European empires from Algeria to the Congo and Indonesia to Hong Kong.

It includes publications of Anti-Slavery, its predecessors and related groups, 1880-1979. This is a period that has not received much attention until recently, as slavery debates have often focused on the period 1780-1867. The Anti-Slavery Reporter and pamphlets held by the Society from 1767 to 1876 are not included, as these have already been made available. However, in Part 2 we now make available an important collection of rare printed pamphlets and reports - about 250 in number - not previously made available.

Sample titles include:

- Scandals in Cairo in connection with Slavery (1885)
- The Hiring of Slaves by British Officials (1891)
- Mombassa-Victoria Railway Survey (1892)
- The Duty of Great Britain in the Matter of Slavery in British Protectorates in Africa (1899)
- Blacks and Whites in South Africa: An Account of Past Treatment and Present Conditions (1900)
- Forced Labour in British South Africa (1903)
- Coolie Labour: the Indian Recruiting Ground (1910)
- Portuguese Slavery (1913)
- General Botha's Native Land Policy (1916)
- The Black Slaves of Prussia (1918)
- The Greatest Land Case in British History - Struggle for Native Rights in Rhodesia (1918)
- Child Slavery in Hong Kong (1921)
- The Exploitation of the Coloured Man (1925)
- The Australian Aborigines. A noble hearted race (1929)
- Slavery in Liberia (1930)
- Slave Trading in China (1930)
- The Aborigines of Australia: A Plea for the Remnant (1932)
- Empire Native Policy (1937)
- The Empire's Racial Peril (1939)
- The British Colonial System and its Future (1943)
- The Destiny of Africa (1947)
- The Evolution of the French Empire towards French Union (1949)
- Slavery in the Twentieth Century (1952)
- Islamic Thought on Slavery (1957)
- World Poverty: A World Problem (1964)
- Aboriginal Affairs (1965)
- The Battle for Human Rights (1969)
- Slavery in the Seventies (1976)

These pamphlets and reports provide ample evidence that slavery did not disappear with the abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade in 1867. Both capitalist and communist systems can be seen to have exploited other races or sections of their own community. Material for the 1920's through to the 1950's will have a major bearing on debates about de-colonisation and self-determination.

Students of History and Politics will find a great deal of material for essays on race and empire and for exploring human rights issues over the last 100 years.

Read more about Anti-Slavery International here:
http://www.antislavery.org



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