by Professor Judy Fudge, MacMaster University
Commentators: Elica Ghavidel Olofsson, doctoral candidate in labour law, Stockholm University
Love Rönnelid, associate senior lecturer in public international law, Stockholm University
Time: Thursday 20 February 15.00-17.00, followed by a reception
Venue: Faculty Room, 8th floor, C-house, Stockholm university
or online at https://stockholmuniversity.zoom.us/j/69078792268.
Registration: Please register by email to petra.herzfeld-olsson@juridicum.su.se no later than 14 February 2025 and indicate whether you will stay for the reception
At the seminar Judy Fudge will present her new book Constructing Modern Slavery – Law, Capitalism and Unfree Labour, Cambridge University Press, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108562058
The argument in the book is the following: Modern slavery laws are a response to global capitalism, which undermines the distinction between free and unfree labour and poses intense challenges to state sovereignty. Instead of being a solution, Constructing Modern Slavery argues that modern slavery laws divert attention from the underlying structures and processes that generate exploitation. Focusing on unfree labour associated with international immigration and global supply chains, it provides a novel socio-legal genealogy of the concept ‘modern slavery’ through a series of linked case studies of influential actors associated with key legal instruments: the United Nations, the United States, the International Labour Organization, the European Union, the United Kingdom, and Walk Free Foundation. Constructing Modern Slavery demonstrates that despite the best efforts of academics, advocates, and policymakers to develop a truly multifaceted approach to modern slavery, it is difficult to uncouple antislavery initiatives from the conservative moral and economic agendas with which they are aligned.
Welcome!
Petra Herzfeld Olsson and Love Rönnelid
About Professor Fudge: Judy Fudge first studied philosophy (McGill BA Hons, York MA) and then turned to law (Osgoode Hall Law School, York University; D Phil, University of Oxford. She began her academic career in Canada, where she was Professor at Osgoode (1987-2006) and Lansdowne Chair in Law at the University of Victoria (2007-2013), before moving to England to teach at the University of Kent (2013-2018). She has held visiting professorships and fellowships at several universities and institutes. She was a visiting professor at the Institute for Research on Migration, Ethnicity and Society (REMESO) at Linköping University (Sweden) and the NORMA research environment at the University of Lund University (Sweden), as well as Braudel Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence. In 2014-15, she was a fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies in Nantes, France and in 2018, she was the Guest of the Director at Re:Work: IGK Work and Human Lifecycle in Global History Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. In 2013, she was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and in 2014, she received an honorary doctorate from the Faculty of Law at the University of Lund.
Judy takes a socio-legal approach to studying work and labour, and is committed to fostering a multi-disciplinary approach to understanding the challenges and opportunities facing workers. Her initial research was on Canadian labour law history and precarious work. She has written widely in the broad area of labour law, most recently focusing on the labour/migration law nexus, citizenship at work and feminist approaches to labour law. She has worked with women’s groups, legal clinics, trade unions and the International Labour Organization.
Her most recent work focuses on labour exploitation, modern slavery and unfree labour in the context of labour migration.