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Slavery and American Economic Development Other Gavin Wright

Slavery and American Economic Development By Other Gavin Wright

Slavery and American Economic Development by Other Gavin Wright


Summary

Through an analysis of slavery as an economic institution, Gavin Wright presents an innovative look at the economic divergence between North and South in the antebellum era. He draws a distinction between slavery as a form of work organisation, the aspect that has dominated historical debates, and slavery as a set of property rights.

Slavery and American Economic Development Summary

Slavery and American Economic Development by Other Gavin Wright

Through an analysis of slavery as an economic institution, Gavin Wright presents an innovative look at the economic divergence between North and South in the antebellum era. He draws a distinction between slavery as a form of work organisation, the aspect that has dominated historical debates, and slavery as a set of property rights. Slave-based commerce remained 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.

About Other Gavin Wright

Gavin Wright is William Robertson Coe Professor in American Economic History at Stanford University and the author of The Political Economy of the Cotton South and Old South, New South: Revolutions in the Southern Economy Since the Civil War, winner of the Frank L. and Harriet C. Owsley Award of the Southern Historical Association. He served as president of the Economic History Association and the Agricultural History Society.

Additional information

NLS9780807152287
9780807152287
0807152285
Slavery and American Economic Development by Other Gavin Wright
New
Paperback
Louisiana State University Press
20130228
176
N/A
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