Modern Slavery and Migrant Smuggling: A Sustainable Development Perspective

  • Natalia Szablewska The Open University, United Kingdom
Keywords: modern slavery, migrant smuggling, irregular migration, migration management, sustainable development

Abstract

Modern slavery—denoting acute exploitation of people for personal or commercial gain—is said to affect nearly 50 million people around the globe, making it a global issue that requires coordinated crosssectoral and integrated responses. Some efforts have been made to that effect, including through an emerging legislative regulation at domestic and regional levels. Migrants, in particular those with unsettled status, are particularly vulnerable to modern forms of slavery due to manifold enabling circumstances, including the lack of, or capacity to offer them, protection or limited access to legitimate forms of employment or social protection. However, global responses to migrant smuggling and irregular migrants are in stark contrast to the commitments made to address modern slavery. The increasing focus on the securitisation of migration obscures the underlying social, economic and political ‘push’ factors that fuel modern slavery. Thus, a more comprehensive response is needed that examines the issues of migration management, market regulation and development more widely. This paper uses a comparative lens to examine global developments in regulating labour-related forms of modern slavery vis-à-vis migration management in the context of achieving sustainable development goals.

Received: 31 July 2022
Accepted: 10 October 2022

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Author Biography

Natalia Szablewska, The Open University, United Kingdom

PhD is Professor in Law and Society at The Open University Law School in the United Kingdom. She is currently serving on the Modern Slavery Leadership Advisory Group to the New Zealand Government and as a Chair of Business and Human Rights Committee for Australian Lawyers for Human Rights (ALHR). She is also an Adjunct Professor at the Royal University of Law and Economics in Cambodia and an Adjunct Research Fellow with the Humanitarian and Development Research Initiative (HADRI) at Western Sydney University in Australia. Prof. Szablewska’s interdisciplinary research has examined the different aspects of forced migration, modern slavery and gender (in)equalities in post-conflict societies using multiple and mixed methods. Her current research focus is on the legal, social, political and economic linkages between business and human rights, modern slavery and sustainable development.

Published
2022-12-13
How to Cite
Szablewska, Natalia. 2022. “Modern Slavery and Migrant Smuggling: A Sustainable Development Perspective”. Deusto Journal of European Studies, no. 06 (December), 189-209. https://doi.org/10.18543/ced.2589.