Metadata
Title
Slavery and human trafficking statement
Category
international
UUID
87970d5a6c6c4ec6a58cd19c3ca81927
Source URL
https://www.york.ac.uk/about/legal-statements/slavery-human-trafficking/
Parent URL
https://www.york.ac.uk/study/international/
Crawl Time
2026-03-20T07:11:52+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Slavery and human trafficking statement

Source: https://www.york.ac.uk/about/legal-statements/slavery-human-trafficking/ Parent: https://www.york.ac.uk/study/international/

The following statement is made by the University of York in acknowledgement of section 54(1) part 6 of the Modern Slavery Act 2015 (MSA 2015) and sets out the steps that the University has taken to prevent slavery and human trafficking taking place in our supply chains or in any part of our core activities. The University is committed to ensuring that it combats slavery and human trafficking throughout its organisation and supply chains. This annual statement covers the 2024/25 financial year which ended 31 July 2025.

Our organisational structure

As a member of the UK Russell Group of research-intensive universities, the University of York carries out high quality research across a wide range of disciplines and provides a range of higher education courses, teaching and academic services in over 40 academic departments and research centres. It has a student body of over 20,000.

The University is a body incorporated under a Charter of Incorporation granted by the Queen in 1963, is an exempt charity and regulated by the Office of Students. The University's governing body is the Council which is ultimately responsible for overseeing the University’s activities, determining its future direction and monitoring progress against its strategic ambitions. The Council is also responsible for ensuring that the University remains financially sustainable and that it complies with its legal obligations. It takes the final decision on matters which have a significant impact on the University.

While the Council takes on a monitoring and oversight role as the governing body, it delegates the operational running of the University to the Vice-Chancellor and President, statutory committees and the University Executive Board.

Our policies and actions to prevent slavery and human trafficking

The University of York has a zero tolerance to slavery and human trafficking. Its Code of Practice and Principles for Good Ethical Governance is followed when undertaking any academic activities. This is reinforced in the University’s Strategic Aims for delivering research for the public good. This Code gives particular consideration to activities conducted overseas or in collaboration with overseas partners, in countries or under regimes with poor human rights records or identified as unsafe or high risk by the Foreign & Commonwealth Office. The University remains alert to the potential for slavery and human trafficking within its domestic supply chain and also challenges itself to consider and assess more proximate risks.

Other policies and actions include:

Also, the University and its subsidiaries continue to identify and mitigate any risks of slavery or human trafficking arising from any supply chains or contracts.  The University is working in collaboration with Netpositive Futures and has continued to embed an online supplier engagement tool, developed in conjunction with the Stockholm Environment Institute at York, which increases awareness of sustainability issues and allows us to:

In addition, the University is registered in its own right with the Netpositive supplier engagement tool as a provider of services to other organisations.

The University has signed up as a member of the Good Business Charter which includes ethical sourcing as one of its 10 components, aligning to the Ethical Trading Initiative Base Code.

Our teaching and academic research

Professor Tomoya Obokata, from the University of York’s Law School, is Special Rapporteur in contemporary forms of slavery appointed by the UN Human Rights Council and presents reports to the UN General Assembly. Our students collaborated with Professor Obokata on human rights placement projects from 2022/23 to 2024/25.

Supply Chain: Risk assessment, prevention and mitigation

The University perceives the main risk of slavery and human trafficking to be in the high spend supply chain areas of Property Management & Construction, IT, Laboratory Supplies and Catering. Through work on our supplier engagement tool we are addressing each area in turn to look at the strategies our supply chain has in place to ensure the risk of slavery and human trafficking is minimised.

For example, the following actions have taken place:

Due diligence processes

The University recognises that proper due diligence is essential to ensuring there is no human trafficking or slavery occurring in its supply chains. For that reason, it uses the NETpositive supplier engagement tool, and undertakes an engagement programme with its key suppliers in order to address the risks associated with modern slavery and the actions in place to mitigate these risks.

The University has adopted the Sustain Supply Chain Code of Conduct, developed and promoted by the UK Universities Purchasing Consortia (UKUPC), to demonstrate its commitment to carrying out procurement activities in a socially and ethically responsible manner. Section 1 of the code prohibits forced, involuntary or underage labour. This is now applied and expected of all of our successful tenderers when entering into agreements and contracts following a University-led invitation to tender.

Where the University is contracting directly it now employs the UKUPC goods and services agreement to ensure a sector-consistent approach; this includes anti-slavery and human trafficking clauses with an obligation to maintain a complete set of records to trace the supply chain of all Goods and/or Services provided.

As part of the University sustainability plan and to focus our efforts, a Kraljic matrix has been developed to identify the criticality of suppliers to the University and the most appropriate mechanisms for mitigating the risks inherent in those relationships. Modern slavery forms part of the “local and global supply chain forces” element of assessment.

Developments in 2024/25 and our future actions

This statement will be reviewed annually to monitor progress in minimising the risk of slavery and human trafficking occurring in any part of the University’s supply chains or core operations. Any queries regarding this statement should be addressed to sustainability@york.ac.uk.

Professor Charlie Jeffery, Vice-Chancellor and President\ January 2026

Previous statements