Spanish translation. This page is translated from the canonical English version for general information. UK legal terms do not always translate exactly — check the English source for legal decisions and seek professional advice for important matters. The English page is authoritative.
Resumen
The Modern Slavery Act 2015 consolidates and strengthens the law on slavery, servitude, forced labour, and human trafficking in England and Wales. It creates specific offences, establishes the role of the Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner, provides for Slavery and Trafficking Prevention/Risk Orders, and requires large businesses to publish annual transparency statements about their supply chains.
Puntos clave
- Offence of slavery, servitude, and forced or compulsory labour (s.1)
- Offence of human trafficking (s.2)
- Maximum sentence of life imprisonment (s.5)
- Defence for slavery or trafficking victims who commit offences (s.45)
- Slavery and Trafficking Prevention Orders and Risk Orders (ss.14–34)
- Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner (s.40)
- Transparency in supply chains — duty on commercial organisations with turnover of £36m+ to publish annual statement (s.54)
- Legal aid for victims (s.47)
- Maximum sentence of life imprisonment
- Defence for victims who commit offences as a direct result of exploitation (s.45)
- Slavery and trafficking prevention orders and risk orders (Part 2)
- Transparency in supply chains: commercial organisations with turnover of £36m+ must publish annual slavery statements (s.54)
- Offences of slavery, servitude, forced labour, and human trafficking
- Maximum life imprisonment
- Statutory defence for victims who commit offences (s.45)
- Slavery and Trafficking Prevention/Risk Orders
- Transparency in supply chains for large businesses