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As a research and campaigning organisation, Anti-Slavery International
has built up a large collection of reference materials which are housed
in the library at our offices in London. It contains both contemporary
and historical material essential to anybody researching slavery and its
related subjects.
The contemporary collection
This collection comprises books, periodicals, reports, United Nations
and ILO documents, videos, photographs, press cuttings and exhibitions.
This section of the library houses a wide range of materials, including
the following subjects:
• Abusive child labour
• Bonded labour
• Child prostitution
• Forced labour
• Forced and early marriage
• Migrant labour
• Forced prostitution
• Trafficking
• Female genital mutilation
• Indigenous peoples
• Codes of conduct/social clauses relating to the above
Videos
Videos on a range of related subjects are also available as
part of
Anti-Slavery's reference library and can be viewed in our video room.
The historical library
This holds over 200 years of literature on the subject of slavery and
the anti-slavery movement, including:
Transatlantic Slave Trade; slavery in the Caribbean and Americas; slavery
in Africa (by Africans, Arabs and Europeans); slavery in Asia (including
the Mui Tsai system); slavery in Europe (including trafficking
of women into prostitution); slavery, genocide and abuse of indigenous
peoples in Australasia; Indian and Chinese coolie labour; colonialism,
land rights and the abuse of indigenous peoples. International instruments
related to the above.
Tracts and pamphlets
A unique collection of over 600 tracts and pamphlets covering both abolitionist
and pro-slavery arguments from Britain and abroad. Together with a period
collection of literature, it gives a detailed picture of the abolitionist
movement from the 1760s to the 1860s.
Books
The library houses about 3,000 volumes. In addition to the core collection
on slavery and its abolition, subjects include the role of the non-conformist
churches in the anti-slavery movement, African colonialism in the late
19th century and missionary and other expeditions in Africa, Latin America
and Asia.
Journals
The Anti-Slavery Reporter, 1840 to present; Aborigines' Friend,
1839-1909 (incomplete); The African Institution, 1807-25.
Lantern slides
Two-hundred-and-fifty images from the 19th century of slaves, slave ships,
the Belgian Congo atrocities and African indigenous peoples.
Reports
Reports covering Anti-Slavery Internationals research and campaigns,
spanning from 1892 to the current day.
Visiting the library
All visitors are welcome to use the reference library. A photocopier is
available (10p per sheet). The librarys address is:
Anti-Slavery International
Thomas Clarkson House
The Stableyard, Broomgrove Road,
London SW9 9TL
United Kingdom
(nearest Underground stations: Stockwell and Brixton)
Opening hours: 10am to 5pm, Monday to Friday
Telephone: +44 (0)20 7501 8939 (please call before you visit)
Fax: +44 (0)20 7738 4110;
E-mail: j.howarth@antislavery.org
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