Barrister James Ewins helped to draft the Modern Slavery Act. SM celebrates some of the many – and increasing – heroes of modern slavery
The barrister
James Ewins
The second slavery statement is the first tangible opportunity for businesses to show they have done something positive. “If they don’t, they will likely get some correspondence from an interested party,” says Ewins, the barrister who helped to draft the Modern Slavery Act 2015. Various NGOs are actively seeking aggressive litigation to haul up companies that are not complying, he says. If a hotel chain hits a PR nightmare that involves slavery among its low-skilled workers, investors can ask the board what they were doing. “Now, there is no board that can say they have not considered the risk – it is a legal requirement.”
Ewins learned about contemporary slavery while attending a bicentennial celebration of the Atlantic Slave Trade Act 1807, which abolished slave trade. He joined a consumer campaign to get Cadbury to produce Fairtrade chocolate – successfully, and soon after, he headed up an office for the International Justice Commission charity in India. He and Indian national lawyers, investigators and social workers rescued several hundred people out of slavery, working alongside police, government and agencies to enforce the law and prioritise resources. “Once when we said we had found some slaves that were being beaten, attacked, raped, they said, ‘I’m sorry we can’t help this week; we are measuring the gap between exam desks’,” he recalls.
In the UK, he worked with the modern slavery working group of think tank The Centre for Social Justice, publishing a report in 2013, It Happens Here, focusing on areas of society that needed to improve slavery. “We said we need a modern slavery act, and here’s what it should say,” he says. They took it to the home secretary Theresa May, who listened. “This was the start of the law, which was ultimately passed on 24 March 2015.”