This chapter examines arguments about the transition from slavery in the period c.1790 and 1833 in relation to three main themes. First, the discourses of political economy combined an economic critique of mercantilism and a moral argument. It was the conjunction of these elements which energised much of the early abolitionist movement. Second, the Abolition Act of 1807 acted as a conduit funnelling rescued Africans to the Caribbean as indentured servants or to bolster the British West Indian forces against the French. The Act inaugurated the policy of ‘apprenticeship’ that came to pass for ‘emancipation’ after 1833. Moreover, it was partly abolitionist ideas which were responsible for apprenticeship. Third, the many arguments about emancip...
“Slavery Beyond Slavery: The American South, British Imperialism, and the Circuits of Capital, 1833-...
“Slavery Beyond Slavery: The American South, British Imperialism, and the Circuits of Capital, 1833-...
This paper argues that the writings of abolitionist Samuel Ringgold Ward and other anti-slavery grou...
The paper describes the nature and role of accounting during apprenticeship the transition period fr...
The paper describes the nature and role of accounting during apprenticeship the transition period fr...
The paper describes the nature and role of accounting during apprenticeship the transition period fr...
I argue that American political discourse surrounding abolition and slavery, sectional politics and ...
The 1807 Act to abolish the British slave trade determined that those Africans seized by the British...
During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the expansion of humanitarian movements t...
Opposing views persist with regard to the emergence of plantations in southern India and the transf...
Nineteenth-century slaveholders of the Atlantic master class had many reasons to be concerned with t...
From the middle of the eighteenth century until the late 1830s, the idea of enslaved people as “peas...
The British Empire formally emancipated its slaves in the Caribbean on 1 August 1834, then in South ...
Emancipatory and Retributive Labor follows the development of a concept that I call emancipatory lab...
Emancipatory and Retributive Labor follows the development of a concept that I call emancipatory lab...
“Slavery Beyond Slavery: The American South, British Imperialism, and the Circuits of Capital, 1833-...
“Slavery Beyond Slavery: The American South, British Imperialism, and the Circuits of Capital, 1833-...
This paper argues that the writings of abolitionist Samuel Ringgold Ward and other anti-slavery grou...
The paper describes the nature and role of accounting during apprenticeship the transition period fr...
The paper describes the nature and role of accounting during apprenticeship the transition period fr...
The paper describes the nature and role of accounting during apprenticeship the transition period fr...
I argue that American political discourse surrounding abolition and slavery, sectional politics and ...
The 1807 Act to abolish the British slave trade determined that those Africans seized by the British...
During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the expansion of humanitarian movements t...
Opposing views persist with regard to the emergence of plantations in southern India and the transf...
Nineteenth-century slaveholders of the Atlantic master class had many reasons to be concerned with t...
From the middle of the eighteenth century until the late 1830s, the idea of enslaved people as “peas...
The British Empire formally emancipated its slaves in the Caribbean on 1 August 1834, then in South ...
Emancipatory and Retributive Labor follows the development of a concept that I call emancipatory lab...
Emancipatory and Retributive Labor follows the development of a concept that I call emancipatory lab...
“Slavery Beyond Slavery: The American South, British Imperialism, and the Circuits of Capital, 1833-...
“Slavery Beyond Slavery: The American South, British Imperialism, and the Circuits of Capital, 1833-...
This paper argues that the writings of abolitionist Samuel Ringgold Ward and other anti-slavery grou...