The business of slavery: information about criminal risks for in-house counsel
Mark Burton (2018). In a global economy, Australia is exposed to slavery through trade, migration and tourism.
It is a crime to reduce a person to slavery, with intent or recklessly. Business and other organisations must develop systems and a culture to keep them free of slavery. Directors and managers can be liable for slavery in their business.
‘When precarious work becomes ‘forcing’: Implementing Section 11 of the Victorian Charter of Human Rights regarding forced labour-servitude-slavery’
Slavery Links (2016) ‘When precarious work becomes ‘forcing’: Implementing Section 11 of the Victorian Charter of Human Rights regarding forced labour-servitude-slavery’, (Slavery Links Australia Inc, Camberwell, Vic)
‘Adding slavery to the list of treaties to be considered by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights’
Slavery Links (2015) ‘Adding slavery to the list of treaties to be considered by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights’, Briefing Paper No 1 (Slavery Links Australia Inc., Camberwell Vic).
Transcript of Ockham’s Razor: ‘Modern slavery is real’
Roscoe Howell (2015) “How Australians are exposed to the slave-making systems which operate in the Asia Pacific” © (Slavery Links Australia Inc, Brighton, Victoria)
‘Australian perspectives on forced labour, servitude and slavery’, with a Foreword by The Hon Dr Robyn Layton AO QC.
Roscoe Howell (2014) ‘Australian perspectives on forced labour, servitude and slavery’, with a Foreword by The Hon Dr Robyn Layton AO QC. Occasional Papers in Slavery. (© Slavery Links Australia Inc., Melbourne)
‘The Role of Slavery in Design Education’
Mark Strachan (2014) “The Role of Slavery in Design Education” © ACUADS Conference 2014: ‘The Future Of The Discipline’, Melbourne, Australia, 2-3 October 2014, paper no. 9
‘How families and practitioners may encounter slavery in Australia’
Roscoe Howell (2013) “How families and practitioners may encounter slavery in Australia” © Address at the Australian Institute of Family Studies (AIFS) Level 20, 485 La Trobe Street, Melbourne; 14 March 2013
‘How the court system might encounter forms of slavery in Australia’
Roscoe Howell and Robert Evans (2012) “How the Court system might encounter forms of slavery in Australia” © Paper delivered at the Conference of the Australian Institute of Judicial Administration entitled “Doing Justice for Young People – Issues and Challenges for Judicial Administration in Australia and New Zealand”. 23-25 August […]
‘Encounters with modern slavery’
Roscoe Howell (2012a) “Encounters with modern slavery” © Address to staff of the Australian Human Rights Commission, Level 3, 175 Pitt Street, Sydney, 20 June 2012. Chaired by The Hon Catherine Branson QC, (former) President of the Australian Human Rights Commission.
‘Music playlist’
Roscoe Howell (2012b) “Music playlist” © Pamphlet, (Slavery Links Australia Inc, Brighton, Victoria)
