students

Call the UK Modern Slavery & Exploitation Helpline on 08000 121 700

student fundraising for Unseen

Unseen partners with student union RAG societies to raise vital funds for tackling modern slavery. We can also become any society’s Charity of the Year, which means your university puts on all sorts of events to raise awareness of our work and bring in funds.

Get in touch with your RAG to find out if they work with us. And if they’re not yet partnering with us, please suggest they do – you could even nominate Unseen as your society’s Charity of the Year.

If you need to contact Unseen directly with any questions about fundraising, we’d love to hear from you. Email us at [email protected]

sponsored challenges

Fancy doing a sponsored skydive to support our work with survivors? Or trekking in the balkans to help ensure the UK’s Modern Slavery & Exploitation Helpline maintains its vital round-the-clock service? A lot of student fundraising is done through sponsored challenge events. Check with your union’s RAG society to see what challenges are available in support of Unseen. And if your university is not partnering with us, give us a shout and we’ll get you set up.

Skydiving anyone? Check out our challenge events
Justine Currell

As I came to understand more about the issue, including through a visit to an Unseen safehouse, I knew I needed to do more to stop this abuse and exploitation.

For the last five years of my Civil Service career, I was the Modern Slavery Senior Policy Advisor in the Home Office and led on development of the Modern Slavery Act, including the transparency in supply chains provision and business guidance.

I joined Unseen to lead the development of the Modern Slavery & Exploitation Helpline, and Unseen’s work with businesses. I am regularly called upon to present at national and international conferences and use my experience of working with Ministers to influence other governments internationally to take action to address modern slavery and, in particular, business supply chain issues.

In my spare time I enjoy keeping fit, music, reading and travelling.

Andrew Wallis

What ultimately compelled me to act was a report on how people from Eastern Europe were being trafficked through Bristol airport to the USA. Kate Garbers, who went on to be an Unseen Director, and I wrote to all the city councillors, MPs and the Police Chief Constable challenging them on the issue. The challenge came back to us: this city needs safe housing for trafficked women. And so Unseen began.

But we never wanted Unseen to be just about safe housing. We wanted to end slavery once and for all, and that remains our driving focus.

I chaired the working group for the Centre for Social Justice’s landmark report “It Happens Here: Equipping the United Kingdom to Fight Modern Slavery”. This is now acknowledged as the catalyst behind the UK’s Modern Slavery Act of 2015. It was a great honour to be awarded an OBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours that year. On the other hand, I’ve also been described as “the loveliest disrupter you could ever hope to meet”.

This job has taken me from building flat-pack furniture for safehouses, to working with businesses to address slavery in supply chains, to delivering training, raising awareness and advising governments around the world.

When not at work, I enjoy travelling, spending time with my dog Harley, cooking, supporting Liverpool and Yorkshire CC, music (I’m a former DJ) and endurance events such as the Three Peaks Challenge and Tribe Freedom Runs – which I vow never to do again. Until the next time.