[3] Hope for Justice is described as a "major anti-trafficking organization" by Chris Smith (R, Hamilton Township), who represents New Jersey's 4th congressional district for the 117th United States Congress and who authored the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000 and several follow-on laws.
[4] Hope for Justice contributed to and endorsed H.R.6552, or the Frederick Douglass Trafficking Victims Prevention and Protection Reauthorization Act of 2022, introduced to Congress by Smith.
[6] After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Hope for Justice published a rapid assessment report covering the risks of modern slavery for those displaced by the conflict.
[14] Four other organizations have merged with Hope for Justice: Break The Cycle 200 in Des Moines, Iowa;[15] aftercare housing and services provider Lily Pad Haven[16] in Charlotte, North Carolina; For Freedom[17] in Bergen, Norway; and No More Traffik[18] in Northern Ireland.
Hope for Justice worked with West Midlands Police on the largest modern slavery prosecution in UK history, in which a gang thought to be responsible for trafficking up to 400 victims was jailed.
[24] Based on the positive results of that evaluation, Hope for Justice partnered with British Red Cross and the Snowdrop Project to develop a framework for the accreditation of IMSAs in the UK at other organisations.
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/public-interest-registry_we-are-thrilled-to-celebrate-hope-for-justice-activity-7132791616364302340-spfJ In 2018, Hope for Justice created a subsidiary called Slave-Free Alliance Ltd, a "not-for-profit social enterprise" offering services including site assessments, online resources, and technical consultations to help organisations protect their operations and supply chains against modern slavery.
[37] MAG, the owner of Manchester, London Stansted and East Midlands airports, credited the expertise of Slave-Free Alliance in enabling it to “independently review, benchmark and develop processes to help combat modern slavery”.
Peter Elson, chair of the trustees at Hope for Justice, said "We are grateful that those affected ultimately felt able to come forward, for the courage they have shown, and that our whistleblowing policy has allowed them to do so discreetly and in confidence.