Stopping Forced Labor How Policy Changes Could Affect Workers, Businesses, and Nations

Stopping Forced Labor How Policy Changes Could Affect Workers, Businesses, and Nations

Released Tuesday, 15th July 2025
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Stopping Forced Labor How Policy Changes Could Affect Workers, Businesses, and Nations

Stopping Forced Labor How Policy Changes Could Affect Workers, Businesses, and Nations

Stopping Forced Labor How Policy Changes Could Affect Workers, Businesses, and Nations

Stopping Forced Labor How Policy Changes Could Affect Workers, Businesses, and Nations

Tuesday, 15th July 2025
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As the Trump administration rewrites U.S. trade policy and 2025 European Union rules banning goods made with forced labor go into effect, many questions about trade’s global impact have arisen.

Some of what we buy worldwide is produced by an estimated 28 workers in forced-labor situations. New government leaders in Washington and Brussels will influence how forced labor is uncovered as well as how regulations to control it are developed, enforced, or even reversed.

Join Jason Judd of the Global Labor Institute (GLI) at Cornell’s ILR School and two global labor governance experts, Samira Rafaela and Kelly Fay Rodríguez, as they discuss different approaches being taken by the U.S. and European countries and how those differences could unfold for individuals, companies, and consumers.

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