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  1. People - The University of Nottingham

    Professor Zoe Trodd is Director of the Rights Lab, a university Beacon of Excellence attached to the Faculty of Social Sciences and the world's largest and leading group of modern slavery scholars. Her …

  2. Dr. Zoe Trodd Historians Against Slavery

    Professor Zoe Trodd is Director of the Rights Lab at the University of Nottingham. The largest group of modern slavery scholars in the world, and home to the world’s leading academic experts on modern …

  3. Zoe Trodd‬ - ‪Google Scholar

    ‪University of Nottingham‬ - ‪‪Cited by 1,659‬‬ - ‪Modern slavery‬

  4. Jessica Pliley and Zoe Trodd On Trafficking and Sex Work

    Professor Zoe Trodd is Director of the Rights Lab at the University of Nottingham, a university Beacon of Excellence that is delivering research to help end global slavery by 2030.

  5. REF Case study search

    Arguing that slave narratives need to be as central to today's antislavery movement as they were to 19 th -century abolitionism, she has revealed former slaves making themselves subjects of a story …

  6. Sample Teacher Lesson Plan (produced after course in Boston offered by the Education Cooperative Teaching American History program and the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, with two …

  7. Zoe Trodd - The Xerte Project

    Professor Zoe Trodd leads the Rights Lab and focuses in her own research on strategies to end modern slavery. She has published several books about modern slavery and held several grants about …

  8. Books by Zoe Trodd (Author of Modern Slavery) - Goodreads

    Zoe Trodd has 17 books on Goodreads with 1742 ratings. Zoe Trodd’s most popular book is Modern Slavery: The Secret World of 27 Million People.

  9. Trodd, Zoe

    This article examines the visual culture of the twenty-first century antislavery movement, arguing that it adapts four main icons of eighteenth- and ninet...

  10. Modern Slavery: The Secret World of 27 Million People - Kevin Bales ...

    Only a few slaves are reached and freed each year, but the authors offer hope for the future with a global blueprint that proposes to end slavery in our lifetime.