Recent debates on the economic history of the United States and other regions have revisited the question of the extent to which slavery and other forms of labor coercion contributed to the development of economic and political institutions. This article aims to bring Africa into this global debate, examining the contributions of slavery and coercion to periods of economic growth during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It argues that the coercion of labor in a variety of forms was a key part of African political economy, and thus when presented with opportunities for growth, elites turned first to the expansion of coerced labor. However, while labor coercion could help facilitate short-run growth, it also made the transition to susta...
The slave trades out of Africa represent one of the most significant forced migration experiences i...
Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson have dramatically challenged the tendency of economists to confine th...
An open access version of this article can be found in: https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/rese...
Recent debates on the economic history of the United States and other regions have revisited the que...
The paper addresses the gap between two conventional Marxist readings of the relation between capita...
This article uses demographic data from nineteenth-century Angola to evaluate, within a West Central...
This paper offers an integrated analysis of the forces shaping the emergence of the African slave tr...
Can Africa’s current state of under-development be partially at-tributed to the large trade in slave...
This article argues that the greatest economic and social transformations of the early colonial peri...
I trace the impact of the trans-Atlantic slave trade on the evolution of political authority in West...
Did overseas slave-holding by Britons accelerate the Industrial Revolution? We provide theory and ev...
This article, using a novel dataset, demonstrates that slavery is empirically bad for business. Buil...
This thesis reassesses the framework we have come to accept around the dynamics of slavery in a seri...
This study attempts to trace the response of the West African Slave Industry to changing economics a...
The relationship between capitalism and slavery has been contentious because, in the Atlantic econom...
The slave trades out of Africa represent one of the most significant forced migration experiences i...
Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson have dramatically challenged the tendency of economists to confine th...
An open access version of this article can be found in: https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/rese...
Recent debates on the economic history of the United States and other regions have revisited the que...
The paper addresses the gap between two conventional Marxist readings of the relation between capita...
This article uses demographic data from nineteenth-century Angola to evaluate, within a West Central...
This paper offers an integrated analysis of the forces shaping the emergence of the African slave tr...
Can Africa’s current state of under-development be partially at-tributed to the large trade in slave...
This article argues that the greatest economic and social transformations of the early colonial peri...
I trace the impact of the trans-Atlantic slave trade on the evolution of political authority in West...
Did overseas slave-holding by Britons accelerate the Industrial Revolution? We provide theory and ev...
This article, using a novel dataset, demonstrates that slavery is empirically bad for business. Buil...
This thesis reassesses the framework we have come to accept around the dynamics of slavery in a seri...
This study attempts to trace the response of the West African Slave Industry to changing economics a...
The relationship between capitalism and slavery has been contentious because, in the Atlantic econom...
The slave trades out of Africa represent one of the most significant forced migration experiences i...
Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson have dramatically challenged the tendency of economists to confine th...
An open access version of this article can be found in: https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/rese...