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After Exploitation is a UK-based non-profit organization using investigative methods to track the unpublished outcomes of modern slavery survivors. The group uses Freedom of Information requests to collate cases of wrongful deportation, detention, and failures by agencies to refer slavery victims for support. [1]
Exploitation's launch report revealed that 507 potential victims of human trafficking were detained in 2018. [2] A follow-up investigation revealed that 1,256 potential victims were detained in 2019, illustrating a two-fold increase in the number of vulnerable people detained since safeguarding functions were introduced to curb unnecessary use of Immigration Powers. [3] [4] [5]
After Exploitation was founded as a volunteer-led project in July 2019. Its launch report, Supported or Deported?, revealed the wide-spread use of immigration detention on potential survivors of modern slavery. [6] The report led to significant press and Parliamentary coverage, as the Immigration Minister had previously denied the existence of data on the basis that the information was not held by Government. [7] [8] In response to the findings, a coalition of more than 20 non-profit organizations - including Amnesty International UK, Anti Slavery International and Freedom United - signed an open letter calling on Government to release hidden data on survivors, and to re-evaluate the Home Office's involvement in delivering support. [9]
After Exploitation is a non-profit company limited by guarantee. [10]
After Exploitation has released a number of research briefings, outlining:
Data transparency
After Exploitation's Supported or Deported? campaign calls for the regular reporting of the following outcomes amongst survivors of modern slavery. The campaign notes that information on returns and detention are already held, whilst additional support outcomes will require a commitment to improved monitoring practices: [18]
Nearly 30 non-profit charities and campaigning organizations are signatories to these proposals, including Anti Slavery International, ECPAT, Equality Now, Hope for Justice, Migrant Rights Network, and Women for Refugee Women [19]
![]() | This article has multiple issues. Please help
improve it or discuss these issues on the
talk page. (
Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
After Exploitation is a UK-based non-profit organization using investigative methods to track the unpublished outcomes of modern slavery survivors. The group uses Freedom of Information requests to collate cases of wrongful deportation, detention, and failures by agencies to refer slavery victims for support. [1]
Exploitation's launch report revealed that 507 potential victims of human trafficking were detained in 2018. [2] A follow-up investigation revealed that 1,256 potential victims were detained in 2019, illustrating a two-fold increase in the number of vulnerable people detained since safeguarding functions were introduced to curb unnecessary use of Immigration Powers. [3] [4] [5]
After Exploitation was founded as a volunteer-led project in July 2019. Its launch report, Supported or Deported?, revealed the wide-spread use of immigration detention on potential survivors of modern slavery. [6] The report led to significant press and Parliamentary coverage, as the Immigration Minister had previously denied the existence of data on the basis that the information was not held by Government. [7] [8] In response to the findings, a coalition of more than 20 non-profit organizations - including Amnesty International UK, Anti Slavery International and Freedom United - signed an open letter calling on Government to release hidden data on survivors, and to re-evaluate the Home Office's involvement in delivering support. [9]
After Exploitation is a non-profit company limited by guarantee. [10]
After Exploitation has released a number of research briefings, outlining:
Data transparency
After Exploitation's Supported or Deported? campaign calls for the regular reporting of the following outcomes amongst survivors of modern slavery. The campaign notes that information on returns and detention are already held, whilst additional support outcomes will require a commitment to improved monitoring practices: [18]
Nearly 30 non-profit charities and campaigning organizations are signatories to these proposals, including Anti Slavery International, ECPAT, Equality Now, Hope for Justice, Migrant Rights Network, and Women for Refugee Women [19]