Study aims to tackle hospitality's role in human trafficking

28 October 2016 by
Study aims to tackle hospitality's role in human trafficking

More than 93,000 sex slaves and 4,500 labour slaves are exploited in European hotels each year, according to a new two-year study undertaken by three universities.

The project, known as Combat, also revealed that around 12,500 labour slaves are exploited in restaurants.

As a result of the finding of the study, led by Oxford Brookes University working in partnership with the University of West London, the Lapland University of Applied Science in Finland and the Ratiu Centre for Democracy in Romania, a toolkit has been created to enable hospitality businesses to identify and prevent human trafficking.

Co-funded by the Prevention of and Fight against Crime Programme of the European Union, the research has uncovered examples of child sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, labour exploitation in supply chains and hotel construction, forced criminality in hotels, forced prostitution and bonded labour.

The Combat study is the latest initiative within the hospitality industry to tackle the exploitation of labour. Shiva Hotels is currently trialling an anti-trafficking charter to raise awareness and minimise the risks of modern slavery. And next week the company is hosting, in partnership with the Thompson Reuters Foundation, a round table to discuss the issue.

Shiva Hotels to launch anti-trafficking charter >>

Viewpoint: The invisible risk of human trafficking >>

Are some hotels turning a blind eye to human trafficking? >>

Are you looking for a new role? See all the current hospitality vacancies available with The Caterer Jobs >>

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