Activist presents: End Modern Slavery

VANCOUVER – Kevin Bales, professor of socio
logy at Roehampton University in London and president of Free the Slaves, will be discussing his new book “Ending Slavery: How We Free Today’s Slaves” at noon, Nov. 13 at WSU Vancouver in the Administration building, room 110.
 
The event will begin with a 30 minute film, “Dreams Die Hard,” which profiles several people trapped in slavery across the United States.
 
President of the U.S. sister organization of Anti-Slavery International (the world’s oldest human rights organization), Bales estimates that there are 27 million people in slavery today: people held against their will, forced to work and paid nothing.
 
This means that there are more people in slavery today than at any other time in human history. Since slavery feeds directly into the global economy, it touches many products that come into modern homes and investments.
 
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.
 
 
 
 
His book “Disposable People: New Slavery in the Global Economy,” published in 1999, was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. Archbishop Desmond Tutu called it “a well researched, scholarly and deeply disturbing exposé of modern slavery.” His documentary film, “Slavery: A Global Investigation,” won the Peabody Award for 2000 and two Emmy Awards in 2002. He is a Trustee of Anti-Slavery International and was a consultant to the United Nations Global Program on Trafficking of Human Beings.
 
For more on the movement to end slavery in the world today visit http://freetheslaves.net.

Next Story

Recent News

Exhibit explores queer experience on the Palouse

An opening reception for “Higher Ground: An Exhibition of Art, Ephemera, and Form” will take place 6–8 p.m. Friday on the ground floor of the Terrell Library on the Pullman campus.