<p>Foreword: Against ‘Newness’ - Joel Quirk</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 1 Introduction: The Interdisciplinary Kaleidoscope and Creation of Modern Slavery in Global Context - Elizabeth A. Faulkner</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> Modern slavery in global context: overview</p>
<p> Modern slavery: rage against the machine</p>
<p> About the edited collection: the organizing logic</p>
<p> Conclusion: shifting the kaleidoscope</p>
<p> </p>
<p> PART I Theoretical Perspectives</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 2 From Social to Legal: Shifting Approaches to Trafficking at the Turn of 20th-Century England - Laura Lammasniemi</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> Section I: the shifting legal and social landscape of the mid-19th century</p>
<p> Section II: towards legal framework on anti- trafficking</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 3 The Coloniality of Modern Slavery in Latin America - Chris O’Connell</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> Methodology: conducting fieldwork in Bolivia and Peru</p>
<p> Problematizing approaches to modern slavery</p>
<p> Coloniality of power and modern slavery</p>
<p> Decolonization and modern slavery in Bolivia</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 4 Constructing ‘Indigenous People’ Reproducing Coloniality’s Epistemic Violence: A Content Analysis of the Trafficking in Persons Reports - Avi Boukli, Georgios Papanicolaou and Eleni Dimou</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> Coloniality and epistemic violence</p>
<p> Coloniality and human trafficking</p>
<p> Data and methods</p>
<p> Coloniality of knowledge in the TIPRs: constructing the ‘Indigenous victim’ of human trafficking</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> PART II Structural Issues in Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking Practice</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 5 The Ethics of Research into Human Trafficking Beyond ‘Do No Harm’: Developing a ‘Living’ Ethical Protocol - Patricia Hynes and Mike Dottridge</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> Conceptual approaches: capturing the transnational and contextual nature of trafficking</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 6 Governing through Indicators: Structural Biases and Empirical Challenges in Indicator-Based Approaches to Anti-Trafficking Policy, Practice, and Research - Ieke de Vries and Ella Cockbain</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> The aetiology of problem, risk, and performance indicators</p>
<p> Indicators as the vocabulary of victimization within human trafficking discourse</p>
<p> Empirical challenges in developing human trafficking indicators</p>
<p> Problem frames and empirical challenges in the use of risk factors: the case of commercial sexual exploitation and trafficking of children in the US</p>
<p> Implications for policy, interventions, and further research</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 7 The Criminal Investigation of Human Trafficking Crimes in the UK: Benefits and Challenges of Police Collaboration During Police Investigations - Laura Pajón</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> Human trafficking: a complex crime </p>
<p> The benefits and challenges of police collaboration in human trafficking investigations</p>
<p> The practice of police collaboration to investigate human trafficking crimes</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> PART III Case Studies</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 8 Brexit-Precipitated or Free Movement-Facilitated? Labour Exploitation of EU Migrants in the UK - Samantha Currie</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> Brexit: a facilitator of labour exploitation</p>
<p> Free movement as a facilitator of labour exploitation</p>
<p> The aggravating impact of restrictive immigration policy</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 9 The Modern Slavery Agenda in the UK: Labour Market Enforcement Perspectives on Law and Policy - Amy Weatherburn</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> Tackling labour market non- compliance: law and policy responses</p>
<p> The paradox of a labour market enforcement perspective: the ‘hostile environment’ trumps labour market security</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 10 Insights from Uganda: Wartime Sexual Violence,</p>
<p> Knowledge Production, and Power - Allen Kiconco</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> ‘The field’: power and feminist methodology</p>
<p> Navigating risk, access, and collaboration</p>
<p> “I cannot tell you everything”: navigating ethics and in-depth interviews</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 11 Beyond Victim-Centric Research: Participatory Action Research in a Trafficking ‘Hotspot’ of Nepal - Ayushman Bhagat</p>
<p> Introduction: reimagining the political epistemology of victim-centric anti- trafficking research</p>
<p> Methodology, knowledge production, and unravelling power dynamics</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>
<p> </p>
<p> 12 Saviours or Disrupters? The Role of Non-State Actors in the Government-Centric Realm of Anti-Trafficking in Belize - Cherisse Francis</p>
<p> Introduction</p>
<p> The rise of NSAs</p>
<p> Belize: the good, the bad, and the ugly</p>
<p> Conclusion</p>