Further Reading
- Cockayne, J., and Panaccione, K. 2015. Fighting Modern Slavery: What Role for International Criminal Justice? UN University and Freedom Fund.
- Cohen, L., and Felson, M. 1979. Social Change and Crime Rate Trends: A Routine Activity Approach. American Sociological Review 44; pp.588–608.
- Ekblom, P., and Tilley, N. 2000. “Going Equipped: Criminology, Crime Prevention and the Resourceful Offender,” British Journal of Criminology 40, pp.376–398.
- Harvard FXB Centre. 2016. When We Raise Our Voices: The Challenge of Eradicating Labor Exploitation. An evaluation of community empowerment intervention in Uttar Pradesh, India. http://freedomfund.org/wp-content/uploads/FINAL-When-We-Raise-Our-Voice-.pdf.
- International Labor Organization. 2012. Hard to See, Harder to Count. Geneva, Switzerland: ILO.
- Joudo Larsen, J., Datta, M. N., and Bales, K. 2015. Modern Slavery: A Global Reckoning. Significance, pp. 32–36.
- Ki-moon, B. 2016. Remarks at Security Council Ministerial Open Debate on Trafficking in Persons in Conflict Situations. http://bit.ly/2uLaMke.
- Melamed, C. 2015. The Revolution will be Analysed, Significance, pp.24–26.
- Silverman, B. 2014. Modern slavery: an application of multiple systems estimation. Gov. UK.
- UNHCR. 2016. With 1 human in every 113 affected, forced displacement hits record high. http://bit.ly/28JHE3n.
- Van Dijk, J. J. M., and van der Heijden, P. G. M. 2016. Research Brief. Multiple Systems Estimation for estimating the number of victims of human trafficking across the world. Vienna, Austria: UNODC. www.unodc.org/documents/data-and-analysis/tip/TiPMSE.pdf.
- Walk Free Foundation. 2016. Global Slavery Index. www.globalslaveryindex.org.