Rising
Pressure

What DOES A changing
climate mean for the
people who produce
our food?

SBR Project ID

Date of project

Location

Type of project

Artwork: Project Feed the Hood wall mural in Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA

2.1 million


People


are estimated to be in a situation of forced labour in the global agricultural sector

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AIMS

What we want to know

Which products in the UK food supply carry the highest risk of exploitation somewhere in their chain – and has that changed since Brexit?

As temperatures rise and the weather becomes less predictable, what does that mean in practice for the people working within the supply chain?

What do the people inside the UK food system think about working conditions across the supply chain – and what needs to change?

Women sorting fruit in a factory

Importance

Why it matters

How climate change compounds existing vulnerability in food system workers HOW CLIMATE CHANGE COMPOUNDS EXISTING VULNERABILITY IN FOOD SYSTEM WORKERS CLIMATE EVENT WHAT IT COULD MEAN IN PRACTICE POSSIBLE OUTCOME
Flooding destroys a harvest
A worker with no savings could have nothing to fall back on
Temperatures keep rising
A farmworker already pushed physically may find the next few degrees harder to survive
A community is displaced
People may find it harder to refuse whatever work gets offered next
Less access to decent work (including the risk of forced labour)

HOW CLIMATE CHANGE COMPOUNDS EXISTING VULNERABILITY IN FOOD SYSTEM WORKERS

Climate event
What it could mean in practice
Flooding destroys a harvest
A worker with no savings could have nothing to fall back on
Temperatures keep rising
A farmworker already pushed physically may find the next few degrees harder to survive
A community is displaced
People may find it harder to refuse whatever work gets offered next
Possible outcome
Less access to decent work (including the risk of forced labour)

This research works towards these United Nations Sustainable Development Goals: 

Project

So we set up a study

How each research aim works and what it produces

Select a research aim to explore:

Combined output · All three aims

Policy & guidance for governments & food businesses

Aims 1 & 2 focus on agriculture, fishing, aquaculture & processing. · Aim 3 spans the full supply chain.

FAQ

Frequently
Asked
Questions

Q: What is decent work?

Q: What is forced labour?

Q: What areas of the food system are you looking at? 

Person standing on fishing boat in the sea with a fishing rod in their hand,

Timeline

The long journey

September 2024

Project begins

Approval granted

September 2024
July 2025

papers published 

Publication of two papers, one on forced labour in US dietary patterns and one on decent work in fishing.

July 2025
October 2025

papers published 

Publication of two papers on decent work and climate change (Aim 2).

October 2025
January 2026

Data Analysis

Assessing forced labour risk (Aim 1) and decent work and climate change risks (Aim 2).

January 2026
July 2026

Food Systems Institute policy document published

These guidelines look at emerging priorities for the future of the UK food system.

July 2026
October 2026

Launch of food workers survey

(Aim 3)

October 2026
August 2027

project Ends

Final results published.

August 2027
Women sorting fruit in a factory

IMPACT

WHAT’S HAPPENED

Expert review

Decent Work in a Changing Climate

Anti-Trafficking Review 2025

Journal Paper

Climate change, health, and decent work: a call for combined action

Frontiers in Climate

man on a dock holding a crate of fruit and surrounded by other crates of fruit

team

Who are we?

Dr Bethany Jackson

Dr Cindy Leung

University of Nottingham, UK

Gabrielle Guy

University of Nottingham, UK

Dr Edgar Rodriguez-Huerta

University of Nottingham, UK

United Kingdom

Rights Lab
University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK

Food Systems Institute
University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK

United States

LASTING Project, Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy

Tufts University, Greater Boston, Massachusetts, USA

University of Nottingham

Man picking crops in field

CONTACT

Get
Involved

We are looking for anyone who works in the UK food system to get involved, whether you work for a big retailer or in labour recruitment for the sector, from a delivery driver to a factory worker, or a farmworker to a fisher. If you work in the UK food system, we are interested in your opinions and experiences of working conditions, climate change, and the perceptions and priorities you have for ensuring better working conditions across the UK food system. 

Authors

HAVE YOUR SAY

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