Floodlight is brought to you by The Anti-Slavery Collective, which looks to raise awareness of modern slavery and explore how we can all help rid the world of this global epidemic.
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... moreBy The Anti-Slavery Collective
Floodlight is brought to you by The Anti-Slavery Collective, which looks to raise awareness of modern slavery and explore how we can all help rid the world of this global epidemic.
Join t
... more4.4
3636 ratings
The podcast currently has 28 episodes available.
In Episode 5 of My Epiphany we meet Mary Sebastian who works for International Justice Mission (IJM) as a Senior Advocacy Advisor.
A qualified lawyer from India, Mary tells a story about a young girl she met who grew up in the same state was trafficked by her own Aunt. As a young professional, she struggled to come to terms with the fact that it was another woman who exploited her. The very people who she should have been able to trust were the ones to exploit her in such an unimaginably cruel way.
What really hit home for Mary was when she realised that the young woman in front of her represented just one of a whole village of girls and young women who had been trafficked and forced to work in commercial sexual exploitation.
Mary shares with us how she has witnessed many women and girls having to crawl out of the darkness into the light during her career.
HOW CAN YOU GET INVOLVED
Educate: Modern slavery is happening to people in the UK, in your town, in cities, on farms, and to people your age. Visit our website, follow us on social media, educate yourself. Talk to your friends and family about it. Think before you buy a fake football shirt, or pay for a cut price manicure or a cheap car wash.
Donate: Your money helps us to continue to develop awareness-raising campaigns and educational materials. It helps us to support grassroots organisations working directly with survivors and work with businesses to uncover and stamp out modern slavery in their supply chains.
Learn more: https://theantislaverycollective.org/
Follow us on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_anti_slavery_collective/
Follow us on x: https://x.com/TASC_org
Follow us on Facebook: / tasc.org
Follow us on linkedin: / theantislaverycollective
#antislavery #modernslavery #slavery #humantraffickingawareness #epiphany #artificialintelligence
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In Episode 4 of My Epiphany, Brandon Daniels, the CEO of the global EXIGER, recalls a chilling phone call he will never forget.
In 2020, 39 Vietnamese men and women, including 10 teenagers (the youngest of which was only 15 years old), suffocated in the back of a lorry as they were trafficked into the UK. Several months later, one of EXIGER’s partners was about to enter into a new client relationship with the very firm responsible for this horrifying event. EXIGER’s systems immediately generated a red alert. Brandon tells us about the learning journey he went on as he found out more about this devastating tragedy.
This is the story that fuels his fire in making supply chains more visible, accountable, and ethical.
HOW CAN YOU GET INVOLVED
Educate: Modern slavery is happening to people in the UK, in your town, in cities, on farms, and to people your age. Visit our website, follow us on social media, educate yourself. Talk to your friends and family about it. Think before you buy a fake football shirt, or pay for a cut price manicure or a cheap car wash.
Donate: Your money helps us to continue to develop awareness-raising campaigns and educational materials. It helps us to support grassroots organisations working directly with survivors and work with businesses to uncover and stamp out modern slavery in their supply chains.
Learn more: https://theantislaverycollective.org/
Follow us on instagram: / the_anti_slavery_collective
Follow us on x: https://x.com/TASC_org
Follow us on Facebook: / tasc.org
Follow us on linkedin: / theantislaverycollective
#antislavery #modernslavery #slavery #humantraffickingawareness #epiphany #artificialintelligence
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In Episode 3 of My Epiphany, Rebekah Lisgarten tells us how as a teenager, she randomly picked up a book at a supermarket which changed the course of her life.
Assuming the story was a work of fiction, Rebekah was horrified to learn that ‘Slave Girl’ was the real story of Sarah Forsyth. At only 17, (just two years older than Rebekah) Sarah was trafficked to the Netherlands from the UK.
During the course of her career, Rebekah has worked directly with trafficking survivors in the UK, Greece, India, and Cambodia. For five years she served on Stop the Traffik’s Executive Team having a pivotal role in shaping its global operations. In October 2024, Rebekah was appointed as Stop the Traffik’s new CEO.
This is her epiphany moment.
HOW CAN YOU GET INVOLVED
Educate: Modern slavery is happening to people in the UK, in your town, in cities, on farms, and to people your age. Visit our website, follow us on social media, educate yourself. Talk to your friends and family about it. Think before you buy a fake football shirt, or pay for a cut price manicure or a cheap car wash.
Donate: Your money helps us to continue to develop awareness-raising campaigns and educational materials. It helps us to support grassroots organisations working directly with survivors and work with businesses to uncover and stamp out modern slavery in their supply chains.
Learn more: https://theantislaverycollective.org/
Learn more about STOP THE TRAFFIK visit: https://stopthetraffik.org/
Follow us on instagram: / the_anti_slavery_collective
Follow us on x: https://x.com/TASC_org
Follow us on Facebook: / tasc.org
Follow us on linkedin: / theantislaverycollective
#antislavery #modernslavery #slavery #humantraffickingawareness #epiphany #domestic
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Introducing episode 2 of our new short interview series My Epiphany.
Episode 2 features Phil Brewer, a retired Police Officer who spent 5 years investigating modern slavery and human trafficking in the Met, now a specialist advisor at the Human Trafficking Foundation and lecturer and honorary research fellow at St Mary’s University.
Early in his career with the Met, Phil worked on the case of a man trafficked from Nigeria to the UK when he was 14 into a life of domestic servitude.
For 26 years the young man slept on a roll-up mat on the kitchen floor. When he was finally rescued, every possession he owned in the world fit into two plastic bags.
It was a case he'll never forget.
Every week until December a new film will be released across our social media platforms and The Anti-Slavery Collective website.
HOW CAN YOU GET INVOLVED
Educate: Modern slavery is happening to people in the UK, in your town, in cities, on farms, and to people your age. Visit our website, follow us on social media, educate yourself. Talk to your friends and family about it. Think before you buy a fake football shirt, or pay for a cut price manicure or a cheap car wash.
Donate: Your money helps us to continue to develop awareness-raising campaigns and educational materials. It helps us to support grassroots organisations working directly with survivors and work with businesses to uncover and stamp out modern slavery in their supply chains.
Learn more: https://theantislaverycollective.org/
Follow us on instagram: / the_anti_slavery_collective
Follow us on x: https://x.com/TASC_org
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Here is the first video in our new short interview series called "My Epiphany".
Each short film details a very personal moment when experts and activists from all walks of life were confronted with the horrifying reality of modern slavery, and their ongoing quest to do something about it.
To kick off the series, the first video features the broadcaster and journalist Julie Etchingham. 20 years ago, Julie sat across a table in a prison meeting room and met a young, quietly spoken Nigerian woman, whose story changed her life.
Every week until December a new film will be released across our social media platforms and The Anti-Slavery Collective website.
HOW CAN YOU GET INVOLVED
Educate: Modern slavery is happening to people in the UK, in your town, in cities, on farms, and to people your age. Visit our website, follow us on social media, educate yourself. Talk to your friends and family about it. Think before you buy a fake football shirt, or pay for a cut price manicure or a cheap car wash.
Donate: Your money helps us to continue to develop awareness-raising campaigns and educational materials. It helps us to support grassroots organisations working directly with survivors and work with businesses to uncover and stamp out modern slavery in their supply chains.
Learn more: https://theantislaverycollective.org/
Follow us on instagram: / the_anti_slavery_collective
Follow us on linkedin: / theantislaverycollective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
For our final episode of the series, we're delighted to welcome world renowned activist and North Korean defector, Yeonmi Park.
After escaping from North Korea as a child, Yeonmi suffered at the hands of human traffickers in China, but still speaks openly about her experiences and uses her profile to shine a light on this worldwide issue. We discuss her story and how we can all use the privileges of our freedom to highlight how many people aren't afforded such luxuries.
For more information, visit our website or click the links below:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Joining us this week is Marisol Nichols, an esteemed actor who you'll know from her starring roles in shows like 24 and Riverdale. But off-screen, she's been using her acting skills to help fight modern slavery.
Marisol talks to us about how she's gone undercover with former Government agents to stop trafficking at its source, often posing as various figures within the modern slavery underworld to help convict perpetrators. She also discusses the lightbulb moment that started her on this path and how rewarding - and frightening - her work has proven to be.
For more information, visit our website or click the links below:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Our guest today has quite the CV. Amanda Nguyen is a civil rights activist who has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, voted as a TIME Women of the Year and has ambitions of becoming an astronaut. She is one incredible woman!
Amanda talks to us about how her Vietnamese background made her all too aware of the realities of human trafficking and what can be done to fight this issue. Plus, Amanda talks us through how she founded Rise, the nonprofit that fights for the civil rights of sexual violence survivors, after her own horrific experience and her inspirational work in the US government.
For more information, visit our website or click the links below:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today we’re joined by a sporting superstar who has proven that people can achieve anything, even out of brutal hardships.
Efe Obada is a tough-tackling defensive end in the NFL, and one of few Brits playing in the league. But his journey began when he was trafficked to the U.K. at just ten years old and left homeless, before spending the next decade in the foster care system.
He talks to us about the hardship he’s suffered and how he’s become a symbol of hope for millions around the world, proving that nobody is solely defined by the things that happen to them.We spoke to Efe before the start of the 2023 NFL season.
For more information, visit our website or click the links below:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Joining us today is a woman with more experience in dealing with survivors of modern slavery than most.
After working with traumatised victims of crime across three decades in the Metropolitan Police, Karen now helps to run Bakhita House – a safe house that takes a holistic approach to caring for female survivors of modern slavery. Karen chats to us about how her work in the police informs her approach today, the need for greater governmental support and how Bakhita House always makes it about the survivors themselves, not their trauma.
For more information, visit our website or click the links below:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The podcast currently has 28 episodes available.
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