A history of the abolition of the British slave trade in Sierra Leone and how the British used its success to justify colonialism in Africa. British anti-slavery, widely seen as a great sacrifice of economic and political capital on the altar of humanitarianism, was in fact profitable, militarily useful, and crucial to the expansion of British power in West Africa. After the slave trade was abolished, anti-slavery activists in England profited, colonial officials in Freetown, Sierra Leone, relied on former slaves as soldiers and as cheap labor, and the British armed forces conscripted former slaves to fight in the West Indies and in West Africa. At once scholarly and compelling, this history of the abolition of the British slave trade in Si...
In the late eighteenth century, the British colony of Sierra Leone was founded as a settlement for s...
This work focuses on the case of a single French slave-trading ship intercepted by the British Navy ...
The Atlantic slave economy was crucial to Britain’s colonial enterprise during the eighteenth centur...
This essay discusses the important contributions of Padraic Scanlan’s book Freedom’s Debtors: Britis...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
The history of slavery in Britain and the British empire has placed the legislative milestones of an...
In 1807, the British Empire ended its legal involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. The relati...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 207-227) and index.Introduction : Abolitionism and political...
This article analyses the ways in which the Sierra Leone Company, a chartered trading company, attem...
In the early nineteenth century, both Britain and the United States had passed laws prohibiting furt...
A leading scholar of humanitarian intervention, Brown (2002) refers to British internal politics to ...
textThis work is a social and cultural history of the participation of enslaved and free Blacks in t...
In 1787, the Sierra Leone colony was founded as a “province of freedom” by British philanthropists a...
This essay reconsiders Freedom’s Debtors through the lens of the three Ferguson Prize panelists’ com...
In 1787, the Sierra Leone colony was founded as a “province of freedom” by British phila...
In the late eighteenth century, the British colony of Sierra Leone was founded as a settlement for s...
This work focuses on the case of a single French slave-trading ship intercepted by the British Navy ...
The Atlantic slave economy was crucial to Britain’s colonial enterprise during the eighteenth centur...
This essay discusses the important contributions of Padraic Scanlan’s book Freedom’s Debtors: Britis...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
The history of slavery in Britain and the British empire has placed the legislative milestones of an...
In 1807, the British Empire ended its legal involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. The relati...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 207-227) and index.Introduction : Abolitionism and political...
This article analyses the ways in which the Sierra Leone Company, a chartered trading company, attem...
In the early nineteenth century, both Britain and the United States had passed laws prohibiting furt...
A leading scholar of humanitarian intervention, Brown (2002) refers to British internal politics to ...
textThis work is a social and cultural history of the participation of enslaved and free Blacks in t...
In 1787, the Sierra Leone colony was founded as a “province of freedom” by British philanthropists a...
This essay reconsiders Freedom’s Debtors through the lens of the three Ferguson Prize panelists’ com...
In 1787, the Sierra Leone colony was founded as a “province of freedom” by British phila...
In the late eighteenth century, the British colony of Sierra Leone was founded as a settlement for s...
This work focuses on the case of a single French slave-trading ship intercepted by the British Navy ...
The Atlantic slave economy was crucial to Britain’s colonial enterprise during the eighteenth centur...