Occupational Conditions in Brazilian Modern Rural Slave Labour

Work in rural properties in conditions similar to slavery remains a reality in many countries, including Brazil. The Brazilian State characterises contemporary slave labour as a condition of freedom restriction for paying off debt, served by intensive working hours or inadequate working conditions r...

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Main Authors: Gairo Garreto, J. Santos Baptista, Antônia Mota
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Safety
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2313-576X/7/2/28
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spelling doaj-d18b60b7a470487ba7dca9e56e8ceb7a2021-04-02T23:05:37ZengMDPI AGSafety2313-576X2021-04-017282810.3390/safety7020028Occupational Conditions in Brazilian Modern Rural Slave LabourGairo Garreto0J. Santos Baptista1Antônia Mota2Department of Occupational Safety and Hygiene, Federal Institute of Maranhão, São Luís 65030-005, BrazilAssociated Laboratory for Energy, Transports and Aeronautics, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, 4200-465 Porto, PortugalDepartment of History, Federal University of Maranhão, São Luis 65080-805, BrazilWork in rural properties in conditions similar to slavery remains a reality in many countries, including Brazil. The Brazilian State characterises contemporary slave labour as a condition of freedom restriction for paying off debt, served by intensive working hours or inadequate working conditions related to Occupational Safety and Health. This study highlights the working conditions in rural slavery in Brazil, based on the Occupational Safety and Health perspective. The study was carried out based on a sample of Inspection Reports of the Governmental Authority to Combat Modern Slavery. A random sample of 42 reports was collected and analysed, describing the working conditions of 392 rural workers characterised as labour analogous to slavery. The analysis strategy was carried out from an Occupational Safety and Health standpoint. Data sets were identified and selected, grouped into five categories: Work routine; General health conditions; Manual machines and tools; Environmental conditions. Widespread exposure of Neo-enslaved workers to stressful working hours was found, in addition to severe Occupational Safety and Health problems. The occurrence of all these characteristics simultaneously was the most observed phenomenon among the sample, which demonstrates that it is possible to identify cases of modern slavery from an Occupational Safety and Health perspective.https://www.mdpi.com/2313-576X/7/2/28agricultural activitiescontemporary slaveryhuman rightsOccupational Safety and Healthoccupational risks
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gairo Garreto
J. Santos Baptista
Antônia Mota
spellingShingle Gairo Garreto
J. Santos Baptista
Antônia Mota
Occupational Conditions in Brazilian Modern Rural Slave Labour
Safety
agricultural activities
contemporary slavery
human rights
Occupational Safety and Health
occupational risks
author_facet Gairo Garreto
J. Santos Baptista
Antônia Mota
author_sort Gairo Garreto
title Occupational Conditions in Brazilian Modern Rural Slave Labour
title_short Occupational Conditions in Brazilian Modern Rural Slave Labour
title_full Occupational Conditions in Brazilian Modern Rural Slave Labour
title_fullStr Occupational Conditions in Brazilian Modern Rural Slave Labour
title_full_unstemmed Occupational Conditions in Brazilian Modern Rural Slave Labour
title_sort occupational conditions in brazilian modern rural slave labour
publisher MDPI AG
series Safety
issn 2313-576X
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Work in rural properties in conditions similar to slavery remains a reality in many countries, including Brazil. The Brazilian State characterises contemporary slave labour as a condition of freedom restriction for paying off debt, served by intensive working hours or inadequate working conditions related to Occupational Safety and Health. This study highlights the working conditions in rural slavery in Brazil, based on the Occupational Safety and Health perspective. The study was carried out based on a sample of Inspection Reports of the Governmental Authority to Combat Modern Slavery. A random sample of 42 reports was collected and analysed, describing the working conditions of 392 rural workers characterised as labour analogous to slavery. The analysis strategy was carried out from an Occupational Safety and Health standpoint. Data sets were identified and selected, grouped into five categories: Work routine; General health conditions; Manual machines and tools; Environmental conditions. Widespread exposure of Neo-enslaved workers to stressful working hours was found, in addition to severe Occupational Safety and Health problems. The occurrence of all these characteristics simultaneously was the most observed phenomenon among the sample, which demonstrates that it is possible to identify cases of modern slavery from an Occupational Safety and Health perspective.
topic agricultural activities
contemporary slavery
human rights
Occupational Safety and Health
occupational risks
url https://www.mdpi.com/2313-576X/7/2/28
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