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According to the externalists, Europe should be blamed for the economic backwardness of Africa. However, this paper shall lean towards the internalist paradigm which asserts that the economic, political and technological stagnation of Africa, can only be traced to Africa. Indeed, Africans underdeveloped Africa. Africa today has been relegated to the third World. The continent is the most underdeveloped in the world, yet riches and wealth are bestowed beneath her bosom. Most Externalists will argue that this unfortunate predicament, was as a result of the dual circumstances that plagued Africa; Slave Trade and Colonialism. It is true that Europe drained Africa to the limit, and charted away her manpower. However, in this dreadful act, African leaders also played a role. To further deliberate on this argument, this article should buttress it point along the yearnings of Slave trade, colonialism, and post independence crisis. To begin with, slave trade began in the early 16th century and ended in the mid 19th century. To be precise, slave trade lasted for about 350 years. Indeed, one of the most dreadful consequences of slave trade in Africa, was depopulation. Population in Africa, during this period, was very slow. While the exact number of slaves captured during the Slave trade era is unknown, it can be asserted that about 6 to 11 million Africans where charted away to Europe and the Americas. While Some died from the point of capture to the point of transportation, others died in the so-called "middle passage". However, as Walter Rodney has rightly pointed out, particular references must be made to the way and manner in which slaves were captured and sold to other slave traders.
This paper offers an integrated analysis of the forces shaping the emergence of the African slave trade over the early modern period. We focus our attention on two questions. First, why most of the increase in the demand for slaves during this period came exclusively from western Europeans. Second, and of most relevance for present-day development outcomes, why was the overwhelming majority of slaves of African origin. Technological differences in manufacturing technology, the specificities of sugar (and other crops') production, and the cultural fragmentation of the African continent all play a role in the analysis. Supporting evidence for each of our claims is provided from a broad corpus of relevant literature.
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Anthropology, 2023
The internal African slave trade is a key topic to understand the political, cultural, and economic history of Africa. As a colonial category, the concept emerged throughout the 19th century as European imperial powers, spearheaded by European antislavery movements, constructed a discourse of abolition associated with the expansion of commerce, Christianity, and civilization. In the process, European imperial agents increasingly challenged the political sovereignty of African states and laid the ground for the discourse of racial inferiority of Africans. At the same time, the term also refers, then as now, to the expansion of the internal slave trade within the continent after 1850. Slavers in different parts of the continent continued to move people across the landscape to provide human labor, this time not for slave ships along the Atlantic coast but for the development of economic undertakings within the continent itself, such as clove plantations on Africa´s east coast, palm oil in West Africa, and the onset of coffee and sugar plantations in Angola. As a colonial and historical category, the internal slave trade is crucial to understanding 19th-century Africa. Moreover, with discoveries in archaeology and historical linguistics, the internal slave trade has been shown to have a much older history, connected with the making of polities in Northeast Africa such as Egypt and Meroë, the trade in slaves and gold in West Africa from the time of the Garamantes to the expansion of Mali, and the settlement of Bantu-speaking villages in Central Africa in the last millennium BCE. In this way, the internal African slave trade was not one but many; internal slave trades were, rather, locally generated and emerged in different periods and places in response to distinct contexts and motivations. Therefore, the 19th-century internal African slave trade, with its spin-off stereotyped representation of a continent without history, needs to be supplemented by an understanding of the multiple slave trades in Africa's early past, as evidenced by historical linguistics and archaeology.
IZA Journal of Migration, 2016
The Legacies of Slavery in and out of Africa * The slave trades out of Africa represent one of the most significant forced migration experiences in history. In this paper I illustrate their long-term consequences. I first consider the influence of the slave trade on the "sending" countries in Africa, with attention to their economic, institutional, demographic, and social implications. Next I evaluate the consequences of the slave trade on the "receiving" countries in the Americas. Here I distinguish between the case of Latin America and that of the United States. For the latter, I further discuss the subsequent migration experiences of the Second Middle Passage, when African slaves were transported, again forcibly, from the coastal regions to the inland, and of the Great Migration, when as free people they chose to leave the deep South for the Northern cities.
This paper colores the history of slave trade with its true colors, instead of the colors that were applied by colonial rulers. Paper tries to travel through time in search of true colors of slave trade. However the paper arrives to the conclusion that slave trade is an ugly blot of paint in the picture of history.
The Journal of Economic History
I use newly-developed data on Africa to estimate the effects of the international slave trades (circa 1500–1850) on the institutional structures of African economies and societies (circa 1900). I find that: (1) societies in slave catchment zones adopted slavery to defend against further enslavement; (2) slave trades spread slavery and polygyny together; (3) politically centralized aristocratic slave regimes emerge in West Africa and family-based accumulations of slave wealth in East Africa. I discuss implications for literatures on long-term legacies in African political and economic development.
2015
The Atlantic slave trade imprisoned the development of the African countries on the basis of supporting the West. I argue that the Atlantic slave trade, enforced by European traders, was responsible for the exploitation of African countries by means of causing social cataclysms, political illegitimacies and instabilities and economic despair. In the following reading, I will demonstrate how the Atlantic slave trade has caused the Africans social and economic despair by means of looking at demographic figures, gendered relations and other political and economic factors.
This paper is made up of four main themes that all work together to explain the impact that the Transatlantic Slave Trade had on Africa. The first theme deals with the circumstances and consequences that led to the rise of the Atlantic slave trade, the second address what the political, social, and economical impact of slave was on Africa, next we learn about the life typically led by a slave on a plantation in the West Indies, and lastly, we evaluate the morality of slavery both from a Christian point of view and an Islamic standpoint.
Academia Letters, 2021
Studies of transition states and societies, 2024
Галич. Збінник наукових праць, 2022
Transactions of the ASABE, 2015
Education and Information Technologies, 2022
IET 3rd International Conference on Intelligent Signal Processing (ISP 2017), 2017
30. Kazı Sonuçları Toplantısı, 2009
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2012
Farabi Publishing House, Full Text Book, ISBN: 978-605-69877-3-1, 2019
Physical Review D, 1995