your support
Trusts and Foundations
The support we receive from Trusts and Foundations is extremely important in allowing us to continue our work.
Since Anti-Slavery International was established in 1839 many charitable trusts and foundations have made vital contributions to support our work.
Thanks to such long-term relationships, we have been able to develop innovative and sustainable work to challenge slavery througout the world. Often this has been work that is difficult to fund through project grants.
Examples of such generous support include:
Anti-Slavery International has a dedicated member of staff who works closely with charitable trusts and foundations to report on how a grant contributes to our work.
We provide:
- Thorough monitoring and evaluation of projects to highlight how your support is making a difference.
- Regular reports on the progress of a project and our work in general.
- Opportunities to meet and talk with project staff.
- Acknowledgements in our annual review, annual accounts and in supporter publications.
If you are a trustee or have links with a trust or foundation or funding body and would like to make a real difference to the eradication of slavery around the world, please contact Nicola Bruch
n.bruch@antislavery.org 020 7501 8947
We would particularly like to thank the following trusts and foundations:
A & S Burton 1960 Charitable Trust
Denis Buxton Trust
Barbara Cairns Trust
City Parochial Foundation Comic Relief The Ericson Trust
Edward S Hogg Charitable Trust
Eileen & Colins Trust
The Allan & Nesta Ferguson Charitable Trust
The Robert Flemming Hannay Memorial Charity
The Ford Foundation The Fulmer Charitable Trust
The Glenview Trust
The Lee & Gund Foundation The Inverclyde Trust
JUSACA Charity Trust
The Oak Foundation The Paragon Trust
The Rufford Maurice Laing Foundation The Sir James Reckitt Charity
Tisbury Telegraph Trust
Trade Plus Aid Charitable Trust
Bonded labour is probably the least known but widest used form of slavery today
©Pete Pattisson / www.petepattisson.com
Former Restaveks, child domestic servants, at a summer camp organised as rehabilitation by Foyer Maurice Sixto
©Pete Pattisson / www.petepattisson.com