Summary This article argues that the greatest economic and social transformations of the early colonial period in West Africa, the cash-crop revolution, and the slow death of slavery and debt bondage, had stronger and more varied causal connections than previously realized. The economic circumstances of late nineteenth and early twentieth-century West Africa delayed and diluted abolitionist measures. Indeed, the coercion of labour, through the exercise of property rights in people, contributed to the speed with which the cash-crop economies developed. Conversely, however, the scale and composition of cash-crop expansion did much to determine that the slave trade and pawning would be replaced by a consensual labour market. They also shaped the possibilities for peasant versus larger-scale organization of production, and the distribution of income by gender and between communities. © 2009 Copyright Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 2009.
CITATION STYLE
Austin, G. (2009). Cash crops and freedom: Export agriculture and the decline of slavery in colonial West Africa. International Review of Social History, 54(1), 1–37. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020859009000017
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.