Would you recognise modern slavery if you saw it? Do you know how to spot the signs?
A touring photographic exhibition which portrays the signs of slavery and exploitation is coming to Plymouth this weekend.
The ‘Invisible People’ exhibition is part of the National Crime Agency’s campaign to raise awareness of modern slavery and human trafficking.
The NCA has teamed up with photographers including multi-award winner Rory Carnegie and human rights charity the Helen Bamber Foundation to recreate the lives of ‘invisible people’ and expose the reality of modern slavery.
The exhibition comprises a series of large, freestanding cubes displaying images capturing snapshots of life in modern slavery - in agriculture, construction, maritime, cannabis farming and food processing, child trafficking for sexual exploitation and forced prostitution.
Each image comes with written commentary describing what the viewer is seeing, and information about signs which may indicate someone is a victim.
The free exhibition is on view at the Piazza in Plymouth this weekend (February 10 and 11).






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