Education Research Current About VU Amsterdam NL
Login as
Prospective student Student Employee
Bachelor Master VU for Professionals
Exchange programme VU Amsterdam Summer School Honours programme VU-NT2 Semester in Amsterdam
PhD at VU Amsterdam Research highlights Prizes and distinctions
Research institutes Our scientists Research Impact Support Portal Creating impact
News Events calendar The power of connection
Israël and Palestinian regions Culture on campus
Practical matters Mission and core values Entrepreneurship on VU Campus
Organisation Partnerships Alumni University Library Working at VU Amsterdam
Sorry! De informatie die je zoekt, is enkel beschikbaar in het Engels.
This programme is saved in My Study Choice.
Something went wrong with processing the request.
Something went wrong with processing the request.

Slavery Past, Present & Future: 9th Global Meeting

This interdisciplinary conference from 26 to 28 June 2025 will facilitate a multidisciplinary exploration of slavery and enslavement in all its dimensions.

Slavery (the treatment of humans as chattel) and enslavement through conquest, birth, gender, race, ethnicity, kinship, and exploitation of indebtedness have been an intrinsic part of human societies. Slavery and a variety of other forms of exploitation existed in ancient societies across the world, and in many other states and territories. The Transatlantic Slave Trade furnished at least 10 million Africans for slavery throughout the Americas. 

Controversial and contested estimates indicate that up to 40 million people worldwide are enslaved today.  This modern re-emergence of slavery into public view, following legal abolition of the Transatlantic Slave Trade over two hundred years ago, is said to be linked to the deepening interconnectedness of countries in the global economy, overpopulation, and the economic and other vulnerabilities of individual victims and communities.

But should we think of these people as enslaved? And, if so, is slavery an inevitable part of the human condition? Like ‘consumers’ of past eras, such as early industrialization, are we dependent on the exploitation of others? What does the persistence and mutations of different forms of exploitation mean in the context of abolition and recognition of universal individual and collective human rights? The varieties of contemporary forms of exploitation appear to be endless. 

The format of the Slavery Past, Present and Future Conference will be plenary. We intend to hold the meetings in person and expect those who register to attend all the sessions to facilitate a genuine cross-fertilization of ideas across identities, disciplines, and subject areas.

Call for Papers Slavery Past, Present & Future

Apply here

Programme Slavery Past, Present & Future: 9th Global Meeting

  • Thursday, June 26, 2025

    Time: 4:00:    Boat Tour on Amsterdam canals focusing on Dutch slavery footprint (with Black Heritage Tours)

    Start and end location: Amsterdam Central Station pier

    Suggested arrival time: 3:45

    Boarding time: 4:00
    Duration: 1.5 hours

    Boat Tour Information:

    • Amisah Bakuri will meet participants outside Amsterdam Central Station (located on the opposite side of the 13 and 17 tram stop). She will be holding up a sign for easy identification. 
    • NOTE: This is a public dock; therefore, the boats are not allowed to park; so, when the boat arrives, our group will need to board immediately.
    • Once on board the boat, after a brief introduction, our tour journey will begin - traveling through the main canals while exploring the 'hidden colonial history' of the city and the his/her stories of the early presence of 'free and not free' people from Africa and the East & West Indies, that are visible on canal houses, monuments and UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
    • There will be drinks and small snacks on board or we are welcome to bring ours too.
    • There is a toilet on the boat; however, we also suggest using the bathroom before the tour.

    Dinner:

    Axum Restaurant
    Blasiusstraat 62H, 1091CV Amsterdam
    https://www.axumrestaurant-amsterdam.nl/contact

  • Friday, June 27, 2025

    School of Religion and Theology, VU Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1105, fifteenth floor, A wing, room 16 (15A-16)

    9:00                 Conference Registration

    9:30                 Welcome and Opening Remarks Steering Committee

    9:40                 Welcome by host institution, Prof. Dion A. Forster – Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam

    9:50                 “Rules of the Road”

    Panels are organized as follows:

    - 10 minutes speaking time per speaker

    - 20 minutes of Q & A

    Discussions will continue throughout the coffee and lunch breaks.

    10:00               Session 1:  Unforgetting and Reclaiming the Past I

    Chair:  Sheetal Shah

    AWINE Emmanuel John A., “Hassana, Not Adwoa”: African Identity, Collective Responsibility and Victimhood in the Slave Trade, 1800-1930

    SCALLY Rachael, Dublin’s Forgotten Slavery Past

    ANAND Beryl, Slavery, Abolition and Missionaries in Western Colonial India

    10:50               Coffee Break/ Breather

    11.20               Session 2:  Unforgetting and Reclaiming the Past II

    Chair:  Amisah Bakuri

    MARCELINO Taryn, Dom Tom Com: Newsletters of Resistance in French Organizing

    AMES Aysha, Fighting Erasure

    BARNES Kristen, Monuments, Memory, Enslavement, and International Law

    12:10               Lunch

    1.10                 Session 3:  Modern Forms of Enslavement: Definitions and Voices

    Chair:  Ngozie Ndulue

    COOK Blanche, Sex Trafficking Is Not Slavery

    EVADZI Charlotte Biney, Trauma, Resilience, And Survival: Mara’s Story In Amma Darko’s Beyond The Horizon

    DEIGH Linda and OBENG Josef-Israel, Voices of the Enslaved Through Storytelling

    2:00                 Coffee Break/ Breather

    2:30                 Session 4:  Seeing the Enslaved -- Through Other Eyes (Darkly)

    Chair:  Kevin Brown

    BRAVO Karen E., Jamaica’s Slaveocracy Through the Eyes of Thomas Thistlewood and Matthew Lewis

    PALLUA Ulrich, The Rhetoric of Inferiority of African Slaves in John Fawcett’s Obi; or Three-Fingered Jack (1800) Re-evaluated in Charlie Haffner’s Amistad Kata-Kata (1987)

    AKBARI Zeinab, Segregation and Race: African and Iranian Slave Boys in the Qajar Court 

    3:20                 Coffee Break/ Breather

    3:50                 Session 5:  Conceptual and Structural Systems of Control and Their Reverberations I
    Chair:  Cecily Banks

    PIGOTT Justin, Owning Slaves Without Sinning: Gregory of Nyssa’s Fourth Homily on Ecclesiastes

    VOS Ida, Role of Religion in Dutch Free Womb Discussions

    SECOMANDI Fernando, Recasting the Master-Slave Dialectic: Data Work, AI, and New Forms of Subjugation and Emancipation

    4:40               End of Day Discussions

    5:00                 End Day 2 Sessions

  • Saturday, June 28th, 2025

    School of Religion and Theology, VU Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1105, fifteenth floor, A wing, room 16 (15A-16)

    8:30                 Session 6:  Conceptual and Structural Systems of Control and Their Reverberations II

    Chair:  Rachael Scally

    BANKS Cecily, The Inescapable Paradoxes:  The Illusions of Freedom of Movement and Mobility, the Architectures of Control and Captivity

    WILSON Catherine, Modern Slavery and Financial Institutions

    JOHNSON Deborah L., Insuring Slavery, Ensuring Inequality: The Legacy of Enslavement in the Insurance Industry and Its Lasting Impact on Access, Coverage, and Business Protection in the U.S., U.K., and Caribbean

    9.20                 Coffee Break/ Breather

    9:50                 Session 7:  Exploring America’s Peculiar Institution

    Chair:  Ulrich Pallua

    BULLA David W., Abolitionist Angst Over the Re-Election Of Abraham Lincoln In 1864

    RIBIANZKY Nik, “The Irish Turned Out Pretty Strong Today”: African Americans and the Irish in Natchez, Mississippi

    BURR Sherri, Generational Impact of Enslavement: The Divergent Legacies of George and Martha Washington

    10:40               Coffee Break/ Breather

    11:10               Session 8:  Diasporic Identities and (Re)Connections

    Chair:   Karen E. Bravo

    SMITH-HOLLADAY Zoe, The Waters of the Black Atlantic: The Transatlantic Slave Trade and the Symbolism of the Sea in the Arts of the African Diaspora

    HAMMOND Nii, In the Courtyard of your conscience: Enslavement, Heritage Performance and Ancestral Disconnect

    BAKURI Amisah, Oppression and Resistance: Culinary Practices and Afro-Diasporic Identities

    12:00               Lunch

    1:00                 Session 9:  Legacies: The System Is Working as Intended

    Chair:   Emmanuel John A. Awine

    NDULUE Ngozi, Ending the Modern U.S. Death Penalty, Confronting a Continuing Legacy of Slavery

    SMITH Catherine, Black Children and Caste

    JEFFERSON-BULLOCK Jalila, Slavery and Policing

    1:50                 Coffee Break/ Breather

    2:20                 Session 10:  Legacies and Resistance

    Chair:  David W. Bulla

    ALENICHEV Arsenii, ‘We can see a savage’: AI’s Colonial Epistemology and Gaze in Captioning Archival Photos of Human Zoos

    BREWER Tiffany Williams and BREWER Eric, Transgenerational Trauma and Its Impact on Lawyer Wellness and Civility

    BROWN Kevin, How Caste Discrimination in South Asia and Enslavement Of Black People In The Us Became United Under Federal Anti-Discrimination

    3:10                 Coffee Break/ Breather

    3:40                Session 11:  Legacies and Resistance II

    Chair:  Sherri Burr

    KEENAN Patrick, Lessons from the International Criminal Court on Reparations for Chattel Slavery

    CHATMAN Carliss, The American Reparations Trust

    4:20                 Closing discussions and Conference Development

    5:00                 Conference Ends

Quick links

Homepage Culture on campus VU Sports Centre Dashboard

Study

Academic calendar Study guide Timetable Canvas

Featured

VUfonds VU Magazine Ad Valvas Digital accessibility

About VU

Contact us Working at VU Amsterdam Faculties Divisions
Privacy Disclaimer Veiligheid Webcolofon Cookies Webarchief

Copyright © 2025 - Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam