Abstract
Four years after their “emancipation” in 1838, the former slaves of British Guiana protested against their conditions and their unfair treatment by the planters who sought to bind them to labor on the estates. When the planters introduced certain rules and regulations, which were intended to regulate the quality and quantity of work, and to reduce labor costs by lowering wages and abolishing customary allowances of free medical attention, housing, and provision grounds, the workers complained to the stipendiary magistrates and stopped work.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,History
Reference52 articles.
1. Notes on Peasant Development in the West Indies since 1838;Marshall;Social and Economic Studies,1968
2. The Economic Impact of Slave Emancipation in British Guiana, 1832–1852;Moohr;Economic History Review,1972
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