1st Edition

Slavery and Colonialism in the History of Economic Thought The Cases of France and Great Britain

By Simona Pisanelli Copyright 2025
    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    Atlantic slavery represents one of the blackest pages of human history. European powers not only colonised American lands, but also brought African men and women to work as slaves on plantations. Intellectuals did not remain indifferent to this practice and – from the second half of the eighteenth century – criticised the institution of slavery from an ethical, legal and economic point of view.

    This book aims to briefly illustrate the colonisation process implemented by France and Great Britain in the Caribbean and to reconstruct the debate on colonialism and slavery that developed in these two countries, approaching the issue from the standpoint of the History of Economic Thought. The decisive phase in this debate took place in the second half of the eighteenth century, when some classical economists belonging to the cultural movement of the Enlightenment, laid the foundations for the critique of a production system based on slavery. On the same basis, some economists of the first half of the nineteenth century continued to express their critical attitude towards slavery and colonialism. The ideas of the Enlightenment, although of European origin, are also useful in analysing the different levels of development that the former American colonies achieved following independence, choosing to invest in either industry or agriculture.

    The book provides the reader with the critical tools to understand that opting for slavery was not only an unforgivable sin in human history, but also an economically irrational choice.

    The origins of the abolitionist debate. A historical introduction

     

    1. Slavery and economic backwardness: the French Enlightenment paradigm

     

    2. Slavery and economic backwardness in the Scottish Enlightenment

     

    3. Slavery and French colonies in the 19th century: new debate, old questions

     

    4. Slavery and the colonies in the 19th century: Britain looks to the United States

     

    5. Conclusions. Recurring themes in the abolitionist debate

    Biography

    Simona Pisanelli is Associate Professor at the University of Salento (Lecce, Italy) and a member of several European and Latin American societies for the history of economic thought. She is content webmaster for AISPE (Associazione Italiana di Storia del Pensiero Economico) and a member of the scientific and editorial committees of journals and research groups in the field. Her main research interests are the French and Scottish Enlightenment, social and economic development, and the link between inequalities and environmental imbalances.