Living Our Legacy

As survivors of human trafficking, we cannot change our past, but we can leave a legacy for future generations. We can turn our trauma into treasured knowledge and make life a bit easier for the next person. At Survivor Alliance, we believe that we are providing opportunities for survivors to build a new legacy, one of our own choosing, to counteract the legacies of trauma. Our legacy isn't just something that we leave behind when we die.  By living our legacies, we are actively leaving our mark every day. To celebrate the 5 years since Survivor Alliance's public launch, we are celebrating the individual and collective legacies that survivor leaders have left before us, are leaving now, and those we will leave in the future.

- Minh Dang, Executive Director & Founder of Survivor Alliance

2023 & Beyond will be revealed in October 2023

2022


Publication of the World Congress Report




Following on from the World Congress in 2021, we published the World Congress report at the end of 2022 detailing its objectives, analyzing the discussions held during the Congress within the broader context of the international anti-trafficking community, sharing key lessons learned, and mapping out Survivor Alliance’s plan for maintaining the momentum of change generated by this catalyzing event.

Read Now!

December 2022


Launch of our Action Planning groups



September 2022

”Survivor Alliance provided me with opportunities such as the visioning workshop where I learnt a lot from fellow survivor leaders and the wonderful facilitators team together with Daniela. On top of that I got paid. Being a young mom that was helpful to me and my then 5 months old.”

- Mariam Awari Onyachi, Azadi Kenya
— "How did you first engage with Survivor Alliance, or how did we enter the orbit of your life?"

Visioning Workshops



More than 170 survivor leaders from across 20 countries participated in our Visioning Workshops, which aimed to offer a collaborative and brave space to collectively dream and envision how we want to see and experience survivor leadership in the anti-trafficking and anti-slavery sector for the next decade. We invited the participants to leverage their collective experience and expertise to bring to life the future that may yet be possible.

This visioning has been used as a guide to inform & inspire an intersectional, inclusive action plan for survivor leadership.

Read more about our vision for Survivor Leadership over the next decade!


July 2022


Publication of STAR-WB’s Peer Researcher Development Program



The PRDP was a key component of the research project entitled, ‘Placing Survivor Wellbeing on the Policy and Evidence Map,’ also known as ‘Survivors Transforming Anti-Slavery Research on Wellbeing’ (STAR-WB). Some peer researchers in the PRDP worked on the STAR-WB project, while others worked on different research projects.

The peer researcher development program was produced as part of this research project to enable other anti-trafficking organizations and researchers to effectively and thoughtfully engage and integrate survivors into their own research.

The PRDP curriculum is now available to download.

July 2022


Building and Integrating Trauma-Informed Engagement Course


In June, the Sanar Institute and Project TRUST launched a self-paced online training curriculum for anti-trafficking service providers. Survivor Alliance were one of five organizations who contributed to developing and designing the curriculum.

Access the course here

June 2022

Co-Authoring of a paper: The unequal impact of Covid-19 on the lives and rights of the children of modern slavery survivors, children in exploitation and children at risk of entering exploitation


This article discusses the unequal impact of Covid-19 on the lives of the children of survivors of modern slavery, child victims of exploitation and children at risk of exploitation in the UK. It draws on research that has analysed the risks and impacts of Covid-19 on victims and survivors of modern slavery. It explores how pandemic responses may have hindered these children’s rights to education, food, safety, development and participation and representation in legal processes. It suggests that the pandemic should be used as an impetus to address inequalities that existed pre-Covid-19 and those that have been exacerbated by it.

May 2022

“I wanted to be part of a community of survivors and Survivor Alliance immediately felt like the right home for me. I decided to apply for membership and I was contacted by a lovely lady named Eseosa. The interaction we heard was so wonderful and since then I have always looked at survivor alliance as my safe space and my home away from home.”

- Mariam Awari Onyachi, Azadi Kenya
— "How did you first engage with Survivor Alliance, or how did we enter the orbit of your life?"

SXSW Panel: “Creating the Inclusive Workforce of the Future”



The nature of work continues to change rapidly, and the national dialogue calling for meaningful racial justice reform, coupled with COVID-19, has only accelerated this change in the last year. These events have created job displacement and an increased demand for technical and essentially human skills like problem-solving, empathy, and creativity. Organizations must build alternative talent models to meet these challenges. By actively engaging historically marginalized populations — including survivors of trafficking, recently incarcerated individuals, and refugees — organizations can access untapped talent to meet evolving workforce needs and reimagine work itself. This session looks at how organizations can engage with these populations and the value they bring to the Future of Work.

March 2022


Survivors Transforming Anti-Slavery Research on Wellbeing (STAR-WB) Project Starts


Also known as the ‘Placing Survivor Voice and Wellbeing on the Policy and Evidence Map’ project, STAR-WB examined mental wellbeing for survivors of modern slavery entitled to psychological recovery assistance

Carried out in collaboration with the Rights Lab at the University of Nottingham, Anti-Slavery International, West Midlands Anti-Slavery Network and the Survivor Alliance, a key element of the project was the inclusion of people with lived experience of modern slavery in research as peer researchers.

These peer researchers were involved with research design, data collection, and analysis. The project also assessed whether the process of being a peer-researcher impacts on the wellbeing of the collaborating survivors.

Read More about the Findings Here

March 2022


Launch of our formal Movement Building Program Arm



Establishing a Movement Building Program Arm of Survivor Alliance dedicated to improving and growing survivor voices in the anti-trafficking movement. Recruiting a Movement Building Director.

February 2022


Launch of US Leadership Academy





“Survivor Alliance is pleased to announce the launch of the Survivor Leadership Academy with support from the Howard G. Buffett Foundation and the Sherwood Foundation. Grounded in the learnings from the pilot of the Survivors LEAD program in 2021, the Survivor Alliance Leadership Academy (the Academy) is an 18-month leadership development initiative designed to fill the gap of survivor leadership in the anti-trafficking space and seed an overall system change within the sector by educating allies and empowering survivors of trafficking. The content of the Academy is delivered through the implementation of three modules that build upon one another to prepare survivors for a role within the anti-trafficking sector. The program is open to survivors nationwide in the United States.

The Academy provides foundational skills around leadership and wellbeing with an approach informed by Critical Pedagogy and Paulo Freire’s work. The curriculum combines experiential education, socioemotional learning, leadership development and upskilling for employment to achieve its intended outcomes. The Academy engages in a trauma-informed, multimodal approach designed to be accessible to and beneficial for people from diverse backgrounds with varying levels of formal education. The Academy incorporates self-directed learning, live virtual workshops and virtual educational field trips, when possible. Throughout the program, Academy students benefit from working directly with other survivor leaders, who serve as tutors and peer mentors to students throughout the program.

Students are also afforded an opportunity to apply their new skills in a real-world setting through the form of an internship placement. Placement host sites, typically organizations who engage in anti-trafficking work as a priority focus, receive content focused on how to implement ethical survivor inclusion. This training, combined with ongoing support for supervisors hosting a survivor intern, helps expose organizational readiness to recruit and hire survivors onto placement site staff.

Following their first placement, students will continue their skill development as a part of the third module in the leadership development curriculum, which focuses primarily on employability and professional skills.

In the final stage, students are offered the opportunity to participate in another internship or opt to complete a capstone project for a period of six months. Internships may be a continuation of a previous role from the first placement, or a new role with a different organization. The capstone projects are bespoke, self-initiated projects that are tailored to students’ capacity. Capstone projects allow students to work closely with the Academy and Survivor Alliance staff to develop a project that fits their own interests and passions. The second placement and the capstone allow students to integrate learning into practical experiences, provide exposure to different types of organizations and supervision styles, and ultimately to begin engaging with allies in the broader sector as peers.

We are not only harnessing employability and career paths for the Academy’s students, but we are also creating opportunities for anti-trafficking organizations to contribute to wider systemic change.”

February 2022


Human Trafficking Awareness Month Campaign


January marks Human Trafficking Awareness Month. As part of the international campaign, we shared our biggest takeaways, lessons and considerations for people engaging with human trafficking and modern slavery.

Access the full campaign here.

January 2022

2021


International Day for the Abolition of Slavery Webinar


”This will be a discussion about the historical legacies of the global slave trade and will explore how our contemporary abolitionist movement not only needs an awareness of history but also demands a survivor-led movement.
Presented by Dr. Hannah-Rose Murray, Historian and Board member of Survivor Alliance”

December 2021


Anti-Slavery Day Program: The Untold Story of Survivorship


Presented by Anthony Steen CBE, Chair of the Human Trafficking Foundation, this panel was made up of survivors of human trafficking who shared their expertise and experiences of life after exiting exploitation.

”Survivor voice and active participation has the potential to transform the anti-slavery field. Our perspectives are more than just trauma stories – survivors have insight into wider issues which influence our present and future not just our past. At this event, survivors will speak out about issues that contribute to shaping their current and future lives. This survivor-designed and delivered interview panel will introduce survivor perspectives, current priorities and future recommendations. “

In honor of Anti-Slavery Day, Survivor Alliance ran a series of events throughout October, including panels, workshops, social calls & training.

Read more here.


October 2021


Launch of Peer Research Development Programme with Modern Slavery PEC


The Peer Researcher Development Programme (PRDP) was created to train and support a group of survivors of modern slavery in the UK who were interested in becoming engaged in academic research as more than research participants. The PRDP was facilitated by a research associate and co-developed with input from the survivor researchers (peer researchers). The programme ran from September 2021 to July 2022 and supported nine survivors who served as research assistants or research advisory board members in four different research projects. The PRDP included fortnightly seminars of two hours each, all facilitated online.

September 2021

Survivor Alliance partner with Modern Slavery Policy and Engagement Centre on two new research projects



These research projects aimed to improve support for people affected by modern slavery in the UK and establish outcomes to guide survivor support and policy, integrating peer researchers with lived experience throughout the entirety of the project to ensure that survivors voices are heard & influencing the policies that affect them.

The two projects were:
1. Modern Slavery Core Outcomes Set (MSCOS)
2. Placing Survivor Wellbeing on the Policy and Evidence Map

September 2021

Run for Freedom - Robin Hood Half-Marathon Fundraiser


Members, Staff & Allies took part in the Robin Hood Half Marathon in Nottingham, each running / walking 13.1 miles and raising at least $250 on behalf of Survivor Alliance.

Overall we raised more than $4,400 from supporters in the US and the UK!

September 2021


World Congress Insights


At our World Congress event, survivors shared their visions for survivor leadership over the next decade. We collated these testimonies and shared them in a set of slides which you can watch below:

July 2021


July 2021

Survivor Alliance hosts the first Survivors World Congress



“The 2021 Survivor Alliance World Congress marked a pivotal moment for survivor leadership in the international fight against modern-day slavery and human trafficking. For the first time, survivor leaders outnumbered our allied colleagues as planning committee members, speakers, and participants at an anti-trafficking conference. Survivor leaders included adults over 18, people of all genders, and survivors of any type of human trafficking or slavery.

The Congress was conceived with the deep knowledge and recognition of the power of the collective. Survivor Alliance believes that international unity among survivors of human trafficking can bring about real and lasting freedom for all. It was also designed to fulfill the need for strengthened survivor-ally relationships. Facilitated online during the global Covid-19 pandemic, the Congress objectives included: uniting survivor leaders across the globe; fostering transnational collaboration within survivor networks; and with our allied colleagues, building survivor leadership capacity and strengthening survivor-centered approaches to allyship.”


The World Congress 2021 was the first of its kind, bringing together survivors of human trafficking and slavery from around the world to build a survivor movement. The entire event was designed and facilitated by survivor leaders and a few key allies.

The key outcomes for the World Congress were to:

1. Develop an action plan to increase survivor leadership in the global anti-slavery movement.

2. Increase the capacity of survivors to engage in trans-national collaborations

3. Increase the capacity of allies to engage with survivors as peers

Read More about the World Congress Here

July 2021


Ethical Storytelling: Why Narratives Matter - Allies Training



”Join internationally recognised leader Sophie Otiende in discussing the importance of storytelling in counter trafficking efforts. This workshop will address the issue of power in how stories are collected and told, and why this is important for advocating for social justice issues. Participants will receive policies and tools for ethical engagement of survivors in storytelling, as well as principles for using stories for fundraising, communication and advocacy. This workshop is geared toward people who have already attended SA’s Allies Training but all are welcome.”

June 2021


MOMENTS (modern slavery, mental health and survivors) - Research Advisory Board



MOMENTS was a study co-created by the University of Nottingham’s Rights Lab and Survivor Alliance to explore survivors’ perspectives on mental health recovery.

This project placed lived experience at its core. Through a Research Advisory Board comprised of survivors of modern slavery, we harnessed lived experience at every stage of the research process.
From the results sharing event: “At this event, you will hear from our Research Advisory Board members and learn initial insights from the project about what mental health recovery means to survivors. The event will conclude with a panel discussion chaired by the Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner, Dame Sara Thornton.”

A visual summary of the insights shared by members of the Research Advisory Board.

May 2021

Survivor Alliance collaborate with National Human Trafficking Training and Technical Assistance Centre’s research on the assessment of Peer-Led Support Groups



Part of our work is ensuring that knowledge and research is survivor informed. As such, this literature review recommended building survivor leader capacity to facilitate structured peer-support models.

Overview of the Empirical Research and Implications for Individuals Who Have Experienced Trafficking and Substance Use Disorder

May 2021


3rd Birthday Celebrations & Fundraiser for World Congress



To celebrate our 3rd birthday we hosted a video-a-thon to help raise money for the first Survivor Alliance World Congress.

Members of the team live streamed from YouTube, sharing songs, poems, lectures, interviews with anti-trafficking organizations & information about Survivor Alliance.

The bumper stream ran across 2 days and lasted a stellar 13.5 hours!

Read more about it here



April 2021


Survivor Alliance delivers Survivor Leadership as Legacy Building workshop at Freedom Network Conference



”In 2018, Survivor Alliance launched as an organization that focuses solely on building the leadership capacity of survivors of human trafficking and does not provide direct service. However, we believe that survivor leadership can be utilised as a mental health intervention. This presentation will describe how our work provides opportunities to survivors to combat the old legacy of trauma by building a new legacy through survivor leadership.”

The key objectives of the workshop were to:
1. Describe Survivor Alliance’s core components of our leadership model

2. Demonstrate the areas of our model that address mental health and trauma recovery

3. Provide a few practical recommendations for implementing survivor leadership in service provision

March 2021


6cs of becoming an Advocate toolkit is published with Freedom Network USA




The 6 Cs of Becoming an Advocate Workbook
Access the 6Cs of Becoming an Advocate Video Series

March 2021



Launch of our LEAD Program



”The Survivors LEAD program is an initiative of Survivor Alliance to fill the gap for survivor’s leadership in the anti-slavery movement.

It educates and empowers survivors to become leaders. Integrating lessons from the Pathways to Freedom Capacity Building Initiative (CBI) and Training in Isolation, Survivors LEAD combines experiential education, socio-emotional learning, leadership development, and upskilling for employment.

Objectives:
1. Preparing members to be leaders in the anti-slavery movement.
2. Develop a team of survivors to embrace consulting and jobs in the anti-slavery movement.
3. To develop an individual action plan for further professional development in any of the 4 focus areas: Community Building/Peer mentoring, Research, Policy Advocacy and Trauma-Informed Direct Services within a placement experience.
4. To develop a model for the program evaluationThe program seeks to enable 30 students (20 from UK and 10 from overseas) to become skilled leaders in related fields either through consulting or employment. Relevant skills and knowledge are developed all across our Core Modules (2A, 2B, 2C and 2D, you must choose one) a community-based placement, a capstone project, and activities in Anti-Slavery Week 2021.”

March 2021


Launch of the Peer Mentoring Training Series


This was a free series of sessions on how to be a peer mentor for our UK members.

”Do you support other survivors or are you interested in supporting survivors? This course will be useful for chapter leaders, consultants, and survivors who would like to support, befriend or advocate for other survivors.”

The course was spread over 10 weeks and covered key areas like: Mentoring Agreements and Setting Boundaries, Planning and Reflection, Active Listening, The Mentoring Cycle, Safeguarding, Anti-oppressive & Trauma-informed Practice.

January 2021

2020


Publication of Annual Report for 2020


December 2020


Survivor Alliance Publishes it’s Strategic Plan for 2021-2023


”At the beginning of 2020, Survivor Alliance began its journey of Strategic Planning. After 2 years, the organisation was fully functioning, with Staff and Board Members, on-going programming for Survivor Members, a demand for services, and the need to determine direction.

The process yielded the following Strategic Priorities that will guide Survivor Alliance into 2023:

1. Survivor Alliance will strengthen the internal structure and operations of the organization to support on-going growth and long term sustainability.

2. Survivor Alliance will continue to intentionally and strategically grow its Global Membership, aiming to reach 400 survivor members by 2023, while also maintaining focus on deepening member engagement.

3. Survivor Alliance will concretize and expand its trainings and education based offerings to become one of the leading spaces known for Survivor Leadership and Advancement.

4. Survivor Alliance will continue to provide consultation support for external partners around how to respectifully and fully integrate survivors into their spaces with the goal of transforming the Field within 3 years, then move into having survivor members lead this work and/or phasing it out depending on need.

5. Survivor Alliance will continue to grow the number of Survivor Leaders that can fill consultancy positions and provide them with ongoing leadership development support.

6. Survivor Alliance will develop comprehensive fundraising and communications strategies and accompanying tools to support the strategic vision.

7. Survivor Alliance will explore its role around Survivor connection, coordination, and support of mental health needs.”

You can read the full report here.

November 2020


Survivor Alliance publishes “Owning Our Own Words”


Owning Our Words was developed to share the creative voices of Survivor Alliance Members. First released in honour of Anti-Slavery Week in October 2020, this publication shares letters, poetry, and artwork of some of our members.

You can purchase a digital copy of Owning Our Words from the store on our website, a $10 donation is suggested.




October 2020


Survivor Alliance hosts Anti-Slavery Week Panel & Publication Release: The Untold Story of Survivorship


”Survivor voice and active participation has the potential to transform and enrich the anti-trafficking field. It is important for allies to hear and understand the varying perspectives of survivors in order to work towards collaborative improvements in how services are delivered.

These perspectives are more than just trauma stories – survivors have insight into wider issues which influence their present and future situations, not just their past. This event will be an opportunity for survivors to speak out about issues that contribute to shaping their current and future lives.

This survivor-designed and -delivered interview panel will introduce survivor perspectives, current priorities and future recommendations, in survivors’ own words.”

”Breaking the narrative that is often portrayed of survivors in the media, this year’s Anti-Slavery Week will focus on survivors lives after exploitation, instead of the traumatic details of the exploitation itself. If you are looking for sensationalist stories about what happens in modern slavery, you will NOT find it here.

The week includes Allies Trainings, General Informational Sessions, a discussion about LGBTQ+ rights in anti-trafficking, and training for case workers and mental health professionals, and our flagship event on Anti-Slavery Day, The Untold Story of Survivorship: A Panel & Publication Release.”


As part of this event, we also published “Conversations of Empowerment” & “Owning Our Words” both of which can be downloaded from our store for a suggested donation of $10 each.

Visit the Survivor Alliance Store


October 2020


Survivor Leadership Series with Human Trafficking Legal Center




Access the full series here

August 2020


First Employment Pathway workshop with Freedom Fund



Designed with input from survivors based in the UK, this program enacted a strategic approach to combatting slavery and human trafficking, offering survivors a gateway into the anti-slavery field and non-profit sector. The program also allowed survivors to step towards full freedom by providing meaningful employment and financial stability.

This pilot program kicked off with the Freedom Fund opening two part-time positions in their London office. This year-long program was designed specifically for people with lived experience of slavery and human trafficking. The two positions available were Strategic Partnerships Fellow and Program Fellow. Fellows worked closely with their supervisor’s team within the Freedom Fund and developed entry-level skills required for working in non-profit organisations.

The program offered a continuum of support, providing fellows with mentoring from Survivor Alliance during the entire fellowship and during the exit and transition phases. The Fellows could also choose to have a professional mentor to support their development throughout the program. Freedom Fund and Survivor Alliance staff had regular meetings to ensure reciprocal feedback for ongoing improvement of the program.

This pilot aimed to trail and evaluate an employment program that was designed by survivors and allies, for survivors and allies. Keeping in mind the unique needs and interests of survivors seeking employment, and the objectives and performance needs of employers, the Employment Pathways Program provided a new model for both survivor inclusion initiatives and broader diversity and inclusion initiatives.

“We hope that this is just the beginning for sustainable employment for survivors in the anti-slavery movement and beyond,” said Minh Dang, Executive Director of Survivor Alliance. “We also want to give a huge thanks to Amy Rahe, now Freedom Fund’s Director of North America, for all her work on the program design before she departed.”

“We’re committed to centring survivors in the anti-slavery movement,”
said Audrey Guichon, Director of Programs at the Freedom Fund. “We are delighted to create opportunities for survivors within our work.”


August 2020


Minh joins The Anti-Slavery Collective In Conversation



As part of their #workingfromhome series, our Executive Director Minh Dang was interviewed by HRH Princess Eugenie of York and Julia de Boinville, co-founders of The Anti-Slavery Collective.

This discussion focused on the essential need to involve survivors as experts in the anti-trafficking movement, as well as the need for wellbeing & community for survivors in post-enslavement. Survivor Alliance has sought to build this network & community of survivor leaders since its foundation in 2018.

July 2020


Survivor Alliance begins Strategic Planning for 2021-23



The process was led by Kaajal Shah, of K Shah Consulting, LLC. Beginning in May 2020, an internal Strategic Planning Committee was developed composed of Staff and Board Members. The 7 month process included a thorough Environmental Scan of various stakeholders, a summary of findings to support the goal setting retreat with all Staff and Board Members.

Read more about our Strategic Plan here!

May 2020


Survivor Alliance turns 2!



Survivor Alliance moved online to celebrate our Birthday via Zoom (instead of the planned in-person The Great Birthday Bake Off, which had to be cancelled).

The online event involved a presentation sharing successes from the year followed by a members-only talent show.

April 2020


US Capacity Building Initiative (CBI) Cohort 2 Launches



Just after we launched this second cohort of CBI in the US, the COVID-19 pandemic hit the US. This was a profoundly challenging time to keep running essential programs and forced us to adapt quickly to still meet & support the needs of survivor communities.

The CBI filled a gap in survivor leadership, where survivors could gather, organize and sustain their involvement in anti-trafficking efforts. CBI USA ran across 3 US cities: Atlanta, Chicago and Minneapolis.

This program was funded by the Pathways To Freedom Grant, supported by Humanity United and NoVo Foundation.

March 2020


The USA & the UK enters a lockdown in response to the developing COVID-19 Pandemic.

March 2020


Lived Experience Expert Group (LEEG) Kenya



Working with Sophie Otiende, now CEO at GFEMS the LEEG Kenya workshop met to review Walk Free’s Assessment Framework (an assessment of country-wide responses to tackle modern slavery). The Kenya LEEG highlighted the importance of monitoring recruitment agencies, which was then added to Walk Free’s framework for all countries.

After this LEEG, the work of Azadi Kenya became more formalized.

You can read more about LEEGs here.

February 2020


Lived Experience Expert Group (LEEG) Ghana



For Ghana LEEG, we worked with Challenging Heights in Ghana, which was founded by James Kofi Annan, renowned survivor leader.

You can read more about LEEGs here.

January 2020

2019

2019 Annual Report is published




December 2019


Launch of our Allies Newsletter



Read our Very First Allies First Newsletter.
Sign up for our Allies Newsletter!


November 2019


Lived Experience Expert Group (LEEG) India


For LEEG India we worked with UTTHAN Leaders Collective and Sanjog, but survivors were invited from several other states in India too.

Some of the Survivor Leaders who took part in the workshop shared their reasons for participating & what they wanted out of the discussion:

”I know the government makes reports without the input of the voices of Survivor Leaders and Survivor Leaders are not asked about their voices, so I am here today to change that” - LEEG India Participant.

”We realize if we are alone we won’t be able to do anything. I came to meet other leaders and to raise our voices together.” - LEEG India Participant

Read more about LEEGs here

November 2019


Journey of our UK Survivor Network Publication



One of our first publications as an organisation which tells the story of our UK Survivors Network, their experiences with identification, the home office & national referral mechanism (NRM), challenges of service provision, becoming involved with Survivor Alliance & ways of thriving as a survivor.

”They [Survivor Alliance] have equipped and encouraged me, and have helped me to understand that my life experience is not for organisations to make profit on, or for story-telling to satisfy people’s nosiness. Rather, Survivor Alliance has opened my eyes to see that my life experience is my expertise. I alone can choose when, where, and how to share it.” - UK Member, quoted in Journey of our UK Survivor Network.

This publication was shared at our first Allies Training with colleagues from the anti-trafficking sector as well as the Home Office.

You can purchase a digital copy of this publication from our store for a suggested donation of $5.




October 2019


”Beyond Helping: Empowering Survivors of Modern Slavery” The First In-Person Allies Training happens in Nottingham



This session was delivered to a number of colleagues across the anti-trafficking sector, including: Uni of Nottingham’s Rights Lab, West Midlands Anti-Slavery Network, Nottingham Refugee Forum, Freedom Fund, Justice and Care, Hope for Justice, Anti-Slavery International, The Snowdrop Project, Lloyd’s Bank, Sainsburys and the Home Office.

The allies training focused on shifting perspectives from helping and providing direct services to survivors, to working with survivors as colleagues and subject matter experts.

Allies Training Overview:

The importance of survivor inclusion for the anti-trafficking sector.

The ally continuum and allyship in the anti-trafficking sector.

The basics of trauma literacy in relation to working with survivors.

Identifying concrete action steps to take to include survivors in your work.

The training also provided participants with access to our Allies Toolkit and pre-/post-training surveys that assess the readiness of an organisation to work with survivors as colleagues.

Alex Norris MP for Nottingham North supported this event with University of Nottingham, Rights Lab.


You can read more about our allies training here.

October 2019


”What it’s really like: Survivors of Slavery Speak Out!” event in Nottingham


Greater Nottingham Modern Slavery Forum and Anti-Slavery International invited members of the public to this Anti-Slavery Day event.

Three Survivor Leaders sat on a panel, where they shared their experiences of life post-slavery within the UK, alongside their opinions concerning what could be done better, and how people could get involved by supporting survivors in their community!

October 2019


UK Pilot of Capacity Building Initiative (CBI) kicks off


This pilot supported Survivor Leaders to develop & implement UK chapters of Survivor Alliance.

October 2019

Initial workshop with Freedom Fund to create Employment Pathways Fellowship Program


The purpose of the workshop was to begin to co-design one potential program to provide employment for survivors of human trafficking.

7 Freedom Fund staff, 3 Survivor Alliance staff, and 5 survivor leaders spent a day discussing key components of a fellowship that will enable survivors to learn the skills necessary for entry level jobs at anti-slavery organizations.

August 2019


Our Nottingham Chapter has it’s first meeting

August 2019


1-Year Anniversary Event in Nottingham



To celebrate our first year of operation, staff, members & allies met in a Nottingham cafe for a Card Making Drive, writing & creating birthday cards for our then over 100 members.

These cards were then sent out to each member on their birthday.


April 2019


Freedom United protest outside Parliament.



”Wide coalition of organisations to march and hand in a petition supported by 60,000 to protect victims of modern slavery in the UK.

On Thursday 14 March a wide coalition of organisations formed by Anti-Slavery International, Freedom United, Co-op, Global Citizen, Care UK joined by members of Survivor Alliance, will deliver a petition asking the UK Government to back the Modern Slavery (Victim Support) Bill.




Over 60,000 members of the public took action to support the Bill, ranging from petitioning the Prime Minister and the Home Secretary, to emailing and sending social media message to their MPs.

Campaigners will start their action by handing a petition to the Home Office and then march through London to hand in the petition at Number 10.


Nancy delivers position papers & petition advocating for the Victims Care Bill to be passed to 10 Downing Street.

The Modern Slavery (Victim Support) Bill, sponsored by Lord McColl of Dulwich and Iain Duncan Smith, would guarantee that all victims of slavery in England and Wales would receive comprehensive support including accommodation, counselling, healthcare and legal aid for at least 12 months, instead of the current 45 days.

It would also guarantee an immigration status of the victims for the first 12 month to ensure the victims can focus on recover and rebuilding their lives free from worrying about the threat of deportation, often back to countries which wouldn’t guarantee their protection from their traffickers.




Currently, the Government only guarantees 45 days of support for the potential victims whilst their cases are reviewed by the Home Office to decide whether they are deemed to have been a victim of slavery, although the Government is planning to extend that to 90 days. After the decision is made, there is no guaranteed support for the victims, and many struggle to make ends meet, some becoming homeless as a result.

The support for the victims is often inadequate, and many victims are forced to embark on legal battles to regulate their immigrations status, often leaving them unable to work legally or claim benefits to support their basic needs.”

March 2019


Survivor Alliance Bradford Chapter has it’s first meeting

February 2019


501c3 Documentation Received - Survivor Alliance is registered as a non-profit in the US



January 2019

2018


Survivor Alliance Publishes it’s first Annual Report


December 2018



Visit to UTTHAN Leaders’ Collective in Kolkata.


UTTHAN is a survivor leaders collective based in Kolkata, India. They were the first collective to join Survivor Alliance, even though each UTTHAN member joined as an individual. Our ED visited to learn about how their collective works, share about Survivor Alliance’s work, and brainstorm avenues of colloboration. This trip helped build a strong relationship between SA and UTTHAN.

Read more about UTTHAN Leaders’ Collective


November 2018

Lakeside Arts Freedom After Slavery Event



Synopsis - “What do shoeboxes, a diamond ring, and Kentucky Fried Chicken have in common? For one survivor of slavery, they are all reminders of her enslavement. Typically, we learn about the horrors of slavery through gory details and images. This talk will give you an inside look at how slavery impacts the seemingly mundane, everyday aspects of a person’s life.”

October 2018

”By doing research on survivor-led initiatives when I was a student at the University of York, UK”

- Anonymous
— "How did you first engage with Survivor Alliance, or how did we enter the orbit of your life?"

Behind the Scenes: Leaders Transforming the Narrative about Survivors of Slavery
Shamere McKenzie & Minh Dang


Event synopsis: “Survivors of slavery live among us, not just as former slaves but as key anti-slavery leaders. In this talk, you will hear a conversation between two anti-slavery leaders who are defying the norms and changing the narrative about survivors of slavery. They will speak about their work to empower survivors, and give you a backstage pass to the conversations that survivor leaders have about their role in the anti-slavery movement.
Shamere McKenzie is CEO of SunGate Foundation and Minh Dang is Executive Director of Survivor Alliance and a PhD student at the University of Nottingham.”

October 2018

“I feel like I’ve known Survivor Alliance for a long time! Minh provided an essay for the 2018 Global Slavery Index entitled, ‘Survivors are speaking. Are we listening?’ while we first collaborated on a project, running our first Lived Experience Expert Group in the UK in October 2018. I’ve been aware of Survivor Alliance and Minh’s work for a lot longer than that!”

- Katharine Bryant, Walk Free
— "How did you first engage with Survivor Alliance, or how did we enter the orbit of your life?"

The First Lived Experience Expert Group (LEEG) Workshop was Facilitated in the UK.


Their focus was to review WALK FREE’s Global Slavery Index. Survivors shared what they thought was missing from the conceptual framework, what they think should be changed and discussed the discrepancies between what government say they’re doing versus the lived experience of it.

Read more about LEEGs here

Read more about WALK FREE’s Global Slavery Index here


October 2018


CBI (Capacity Building Initiative) USA, Survivor Alliance’s first program, is formed.


This program filled a gap in survivor leadership, where survivors could gather, organize and sustain their involvement in anti-trafficking efforts. CBI USA ran across 3 US cities: Atlanta, Chicago and Minneapolis.

This program was funded by the Pathways To Freedom Grant, supported by Humanity United and NoVo Foundation.

September 2018

“I first engaged with Survivor Alliance when I met Minh Dang at the Rights Lab.”

- Amelia Watkins-Smith, PhD Student & Ally
— "How did you first engage with Survivor Alliance, or how did we enter the orbit of your life?"

The Modern Day Slavery and Survivors Voices Conference with Nottingham Rights Lab & Nottingham Business School.



The Maasai Cricket Warriors visit from Kenya to run a workshop for to learn more about ending FGM, forced marriage and modern slavery.



The day ended with a game of cricket!

August 2018

“Meeting with other Survivors. And participated actively in every programs and contributed to polishing SA to do something unique in Anti Slavery movement and empowering them globally.”

- Manoj Guran, Human rights Activist & Anti Trafficking Specialist (Freelance)
— "How did you first engage with Survivor Alliance, or how did we enter the orbit of your life?"

Survivor Alliance gets a logo!



Beautifully designed by our friends at Mojatu Foundation.

August 2018


Survivor Alliance UK C.I.C is incorporated with Companies House!



June 2018


Survivor Alliance Launches on Twitter!


”...So we decided April 23rd that we were going to launch. It was a Twitter chat... basically you get people online at the same time, and it was two things that day: we released membership enrolment so people could sign up and then we were online on Twitter at a certain time so that people could ask us questions like: What is Survivor Alliance about? What does it mean to join? What can you do? ...Our Membership Coordinator was on her own personal account and I was on our organisation account and my personal account, so I was like asking myself questions... At one point we were in her kitchen in Nottingham ...and it was just so funny also talking to each other whilst writing to ourselves and cracking up because it was just like ‘oh Minh what do you think?’ That was it. No big event.”

April 2018

2017


The Freedom Fund become Survivor Alliance’s fiscal sponsor



Enabling Survivor Alliance to begin its journey as a non-profit.

Read more about The Freedom Fund


December 2017


Minh presents at University of Nottingham’s Right’s Lab Event:

”Collaborating for Freedom: Anti-Slavery Partnerships in the UK.”



Multi-agency partnership working is often highlighted as an essential aspect of the UK public policy response to modern slavery. The Home Office’s (2014) Modern Slavery Strategy emphasises that effective partnership work is ‘crucial’ and must include ‘greater awareness among frontline professionals, coordinated international activity, close working with the private sector and support from communities, including civil society and faith groups’.

However, despite the priority placed on partnerships by the UK Government, there has been little guidance to date on the form they should take, or how they might best identify and deliver shared goals and responsibilities. In the majority of cases there has also been no dedicated funding to facilitate partnership activity, and no means of monitoring what activity is in place. This means that until now, relatively little has been understood about the different partnership responses to Modern Slavery that are emerging across the UK.

This research report is part of a collaborative project between the Office of the Independent AntiSlavery Commissioner (IASC) and the University of Nottingham. The aim of the work was to map multi-agency anti-slavery partnerships across the UK, identify potential examples of ‘good practice’ among them and understand the conditions that helped to facilitate success.

Read the Report Here






October 2017

Formal conversations between University of Nottingham’s Rights Lab & Survivor Alliance Begin




Find out more about Rights Lab here.

October 2017


Survivor Alliance’s mission statement is finalised


”Uniting and empowering survivors of slavery and trafficking to be leaders of the anti-slavery movement.”

October 2017

2016


The first concept note about Survivor Alliance is submitted to potential funders.


”Every successful social movement has required the voices of those whose lives are deeply affected by injustice. For centuries, victims of violence have successfully led the development of effective policies and interventions. The Survivor Alliance will provide one key solution that is currently missing: a survivor-driven institution to organize and champion the voices of survivors of human trafficking and slavery.

Currently, survivor leaders rely on invitations from media, non-profits, government agencies, and universities, to have our voices heard. We have called on these same institutions to support and elevate our voices. Now, a new strategy is needed. We want to build a resilient survivor movement that sustains the advocacy whims, and that is proactive in sharing our expertise, rather than reactive to the requests for our input.

In order to organize survivor voices, survivors must be the lead organizers. ”


October 2016


An organisation name is decided: Survivor Alliance.



(Alternative ideas included Survivor Coalition!)

September 2016


First discussions are had about starting “The Survivor Alliance”.



“The first time the idea of Survivor Alliance entered into my head was after an advisory group. There were a handful of US survivor leaders advising an organization on their survivor inclusion work and we were disappointed that they were just asking advice their organization. On the one hand we understood, but on the other hand, we were wanting them, a major organization, to help us push for wider change and wider engagement with survivors.

I also saw that it was limited for us to basically ask to be included. Some of us had a follow up meeting and talked about this idea that we need to have our own space to define the priorities.”

April 2016