Postcolonial Frameworks with Survivors’ Voices: Teaching about contemporary and historical forms of slavery and forced labour

Authors

  • Sallie Yea

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201221175

Keywords:

education, slavery, human trafficking, history, postcolonialism, agency, representation

Abstract

Much of the information for educating students and the public about human trafficking only involves survivors’ direct experiences as brief excerpts from more complex and detailed narratives. In this paper, I draw on a postcolonial framework to argue that sidelining survivors’ voices can bolster anti-slavery stakeholders’ agendas by selectively using survivors’ narratives to illustrate narrow constructions of slavery and forced labour. As part of education and awareness efforts, such approaches to understanding slavery and forced labour also perpetuate stereotypes that trafficked persons are powerless and lack agency. Therefore, I present an alternative educational approach to remedy these tendencies by viewing and discussing narratives by, and about, trafficked persons. This paper uses a university-level humanities and social science subject on trafficking and slavery, and related assessment tasks, as a case study to demonstrate the potential of survivors’ voices in teaching about slavery.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Author Biography

Sallie Yea

Sallie Yea is Principal Research Fellow and Associate Professor in the Department of Social Inquiry at La Trobe University, Melbourne. Her teaching and research both focus on modern-day slavery, human trafficking, and forced labour. Her research adopts a feminist geopolitical approach to understandings of these issues. Her current research focuses on justice in cases of ‘seafood slavery’ and in cases of organ trafficking. She has recently commenced a project examining return from trafficking in the context of COVID-19. Her most recent book, Paved with Good Intentions: Human trafficking and the anti-trafficking movement in Singapore (Routledge, 2019), critically examines Singapore’s anti-trafficking movement and its relationship to trafficked persons and forced labourers.

Downloads

Published

15-09-2021

How to Cite

Yea, S. (2021). Postcolonial Frameworks with Survivors’ Voices: Teaching about contemporary and historical forms of slavery and forced labour. Anti-Trafficking Review, (17), 73–90. https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201221175