ABSTRACT

This is the first book to explore workforce slavery and liberation together within commercial hotel, restaurant and bar activities, the hospitality industry being particularly vulnerable to potential illegal action and reputational damage via involuntary involvement in human trafficking and sexual exploitation.

Slavery is the most oppressive form of labour exploitation and is illegal in Western Europe and most of the industrialised world. On the other hand, ‘neo-slavery’ oppresses the powerless through low pay and employment practices that predominantly serve the interests of the employer. This book explores the most exploitative forms of slavery, 'neo-slavery' and human trafficking in the hotel industry, and offers insights into empowerment through liberative trade unions and worker co-operatives. The study’s multifaceted cross-cultural approach includes in-depth chapters on Brazil and the Netherlands as well as a multitude of examples from the UK, exposing the topic as an international problem.

Written by international specialists, this significant book will appeal widely to upper-level students and researchers in hospitality, and specifically, to all those interested in human resource management in the hospitality and hotel industry, as well as human rights issues and business ethics.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|15 pages

How would I feel?

Slavery, neo-slavery ethics and oppression

chapter 2|20 pages

Slavery, ancient and modern

Global and national insights

chapter 3|18 pages

Slavery in Brazil

Revelations from a destination

chapter 4|13 pages

When is a guest not a guest?

Human trafficking in hotels in the Netherlands

chapter 6|19 pages

Neoliberalism

The empire strikes back

chapter 7|16 pages

Neo-slavery

And the weakest will suffer what they must!

chapter 8|18 pages

Empowerment

Boosting workforce enthusiasm?

chapter 9|16 pages

Trade union membership

The resistance power of the collective

chapter 10|16 pages

Worker co-operatives

Justice and liberation

chapter 11|16 pages

The way things are, or are they?