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Slavery and American economic developmentSlavery and American economic development

Slavery and American economic development2007

Gavin Wright

About this book

"Through an original analysis of slavery as an economic institution, Gavin Wright presents a fresh look a the economic divergence between North and South in the antebellum era. Wright draws a distinction between slavery as a form of work organization (the aspect that has dominated historical debates) and slavery as a set of property rights. Slaves could be purchased and carried to any location where slavery was legal; they could be assigned to any task regardless of gender or age; they could be punished for disobedience, with no effective recourse to the law; they could be accumulated as a form of wealth; they could be sold or bequeathed. Wright argues that slave-based commerce was central to the eighteenth-century rise of the Atlantic economy, not because slave plantations were superior as a method of organizing production, but because slaves could be put to work on sugar plantations that could not have attracted free labor on economically viable terms"--BOOK JACKET.

Details

First published
2007
OL Work ID
OL1673311W

Subjects

Right of propertyEconomic conditionsSlaveryHistorySlavery, united statesUnited states, economic conditions, to 1865Economic aspects

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HardcoverOpen Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.