Joel Quirk, 鈥淭he Fictive Coherence of Global Struggle:聽Combating 鈥楳odern-Day Slavery鈥 in Rhetoric and Practice鈥澛
Monday, 28th September, 2015
Burnside Hall, Room 107 (via video-conference)
12:30-2:00 p.m.聽
Abstract : Combating human trafficking has been widely presented as a cohesive and singular global cause, which builds upon the noble work of 鈥榤odern-day abolitionists鈥 seeking to finally end slavery once and for all. 聽The main argument of this paper is that this 聽popular rhetoric of shared global struggle is both highly misleading and politically problematic. In its current incarnation, 鈥榯he cause鈥 of ending human trafficking and 鈥榤odern-day slavery鈥 brings together two major elements: i) an increasingly dense regime of law and policy which is universal in scope yet shallow and selective when it comes to effective application, and ii) a diverse portfolio of more substantive political interventions which tend to heavily concentrate upon specific locations and industries. These case-specific interventions often have little or no direct connection to parallel interventions taking place in other parts of the world. There may well be broad 聽similarities in the types of abuses which occur in different contexts and countries, but a great deal of a creative aggregation and extrapolation is required in order to translate broad similarities into the language of a singular and cohesive global cause. 聽Once we puncture this fictive coherence, it quickly becomes clear that there is not one global anti-trafficking or anti-slavery movement, but many different movements and actors with different agendas and interests, most of which primarily focus upon specific issues and/or localised concerns. 聽In stark contrast to historical campaigns to end legal slavery, which were firmly aimed at the profits and privileges of the rich and powerful, most of these interventions only rarely pose a direct threat to major political and economic interests, which is ultimately a key source of their appeal. 聽
Joel Quirk is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Studies, University of the Witwatersrand. His research focuses on slavery and abolition, human mobility and human rights, repairing historical wrongs, and history and politics of sub-Saharan Africa. Recent works include The Anti-Slavery Project (Penn, 2011), International Orders in the Early Modern World 聽(Routledge, 2014, co-edited), Mobility Makes States (Penn, 2015, co-edited), and The Invention of Contemporary Slavery 聽(UBC, in press, co-edited). He has also recently co-edited special issues/sections on Repairing Historical Wrongs ( Social & Legal Studies, 2012), 聽Sampling Techniques in Johannesburg ( Journal of Refugee Studies, 2012) and the Politics of Numbers ( Review of International Studies, 聽2015). 聽Joel is a current member of the International Scientific Committee of the UNESCO Slave Route Project, where he serves as Rapporteur, and is also an editor for openDemocracy鈥檚 鈥楤eyond Trafficking and Slavery鈥 ( ). 聽
Slavery Old and New is a joint research initiative which examines the legal conceptualization of labour exploitation. Through an interdisciplinary, transnational and historical methodology, this project draws on a variety of disciplines, spaces in time, and places around the world, to explore law鈥檚 understanding of 鈥渓abour exploitation鈥 and its relationship to society and practices.