In this innovative reinterpretation of the economic history of Africa and Europe, Warren C. Whatley argues that freedom from Western-style slavery is the origin of modern Western economic growth. Such freedom was achieved around the 13th century in Western European Christendom by making enslavement among European Christians a sin but still a recognized property right and form of wealth. After 1500, the triangular trade in the North Atlantic integrates the slave and free sectors of expanding European Empires, spreading freedom and development in Europe and slavery and underdevelopment in Africa. Whatley documents when the slave and/or free sectors drove the expansion of Empire, and how exposure to slave trades in Africa spread institutions and norms better suited to capturing and trading people - slavery, polygyny, ethnic stratification and inherited aristocracies - some of the mechanisms through which the past is still felt in Africa today.
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Worked examples or Exercises
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ISBN-13
978-1-009-40714-4 (9781009407144)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Warren C. Whatley is professor emeritus of economics at the University of Michigan whose scholarly research in economic history spans Africa, Europe and the Americas. He served on the editorial boards of the Journal of Economic History and Explorations in Economic History, and as President of the National Economic Association.
Autor*in
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
List of Figures; List of Maps; List of Tables; Preface; Acknowledgements; 1. Reinterpreting African Economic History; 2. Going Behind the Mirror Image; 3. Lessons from Slavery in World History; 4. On the Origins of Western Freedom and Development; 5. African Development Before the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade; 6. The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade in Africa; 7. How African-American Slavery Grew the Free Economies of Europe; 8. Into the Interior of Africa; 9. How the Slave Trades Underdeveloped Africa; 10. Past, Present, and Future; References; Index.