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Sociology is based on a conventional view of the emergence of modernity and the ‘rise of the West’. This privileges mainstream Euro-centred histories. Most sociological accounts of modernity, for example, neglect broader issues of colonialism and empire. They also fail to address the role of forced labour alongside free labour, issues of dispossession and settlement, and the classification of societies and peoples by their ‘stages of development’. The Connected Sociologies Curriculum Project responds to these challenges by providing resources for the reconstruction of the curriculum in the light of new connected histories and their associated connected sociologies. The project is designed to support the transformation of school, college, and university curricula through a critical engagement with the broader histories that have shaped modern societies.
Episodes

Monday Feb 15, 2021
Global Supply Chains and Unfree Labour - Prof Genevieve LeBaron
Monday Feb 15, 2021
Monday Feb 15, 2021
Global supply chains today depend on and reinforce relations of unfree labour, including forced, child, and trafficked labour. These coercive labour relations are often described as a ‘new slavery’, and are understood to be driven by criminality, cultural backwardness, corruption and poverty in the contemporary economy. Yet, dominant narratives about ‘new slavery’ gloss over the historic and ongoing dynamics of colonial capitalism in predictably giving rise to unfree labour in supply chains. These dynamics include: dispossession and expropriation; colonial histories of unfree labour and how these continue to shape the lives of contemporary workers and communities; the role of wealthy states and corporations in engineering global supply chains that yield unequal wealth and value distribution and result in endemic exploitation, violence, and coercion. A deeper analysis reveals that contemporary unfree labour relations are anchored in the legacies and ongoing dynamics of colonial capitalism. In this session, we consider the significance of colonial capitalism in giving rise to unfree labour in global supply chains, and focus on an example of India’s tea industry to ground our discussion.
Readings
- LeBaron, Genevieve. 2018. The Global Business of Forced Labour: Report of Findings. University of Sheffield.
- Behal, Rana. P. One Hundred Years of Servitude: Political Economy of Tea Plantations in Colonial Assam. New York: Columbia University Press.
- LeBaron, Genevieve, Howard, Neil, Thibos, Cameron, and Kyritsis, Penelope (2018) Confronting Root Causes: Forced Labour in Global Supply Chains. London: openDemocracy.
- Sharma, Nandita. 2020. ‘States and Human Immobilization: Bridging the Conceptual Separation of Slavery, Immigration Controls, and Mass Incarceration.’ Citizenship Studies (online first).
- Beautin, Lyndsey P. 2017. ‘Black Suffering for/from Anti-Trafficking Advocacy.’ Anti-Trafficking Review (9): 14-30.
Resources
- Beyond Trafficking and Slavery –openDemocracy.net platform featuring articles by activists and academics
- Slavery and its Legacies- Yale University Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance & Abolition podcasts
- Whitewashing Abolition: Race, Displacement, and Combating Human Trafficking – Brown University conference proceedings website
- Forced Labor and Workers Rights- 10 minute film about forced labour in global supply chains featuring the research of Genevieve LeBaron
Questions for discussion
- What does the ‘New Slavery’ framing of unfree labour reveal and conceal about colonial capitalism? Does it constitute whitewashing?
- What is the role of states and corporations in engineering contemporary dynamics of unfree labour in global supply chains? How have their roles evolved throughout history?
- Using the example of the contemporary tea supply chain, how do current dynamics of wealth accumulation, inequality, and exploitation relate to histories of colonial plunder and expropriation?
- What does the prevalence of unfree labour in contemporary global supply chains tell us about how colonial capitalism works?
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