Limit search to available items
Your search query has been changed... Tried: (capitalism and arabian and sea and history and 19th and cent) no results found... Tried: (capitalism or arabian or sea or history or 19th or cent)
32000 results found. Sorted by relevance .
Book Cover
E-book
Author Everill, Bronwen, 1983- author.

Title Not made by slaves : ethical capitalism in the age of abolition / Bronwen Everill
Published Cambridge : Harvard University Press, 2020

Copies

Description 1 online resource (x, 318 pages)
Contents Introduction: Bad tobacco -- Anxious consumers -- Goods of questionable morality -- Protecting ethical brands -- Rotten credit -- Picking winners -- A rising tide lifts all boats -- Consumer nationalism in black and white -- Epilogue: Global social responsibility
Summary ""East India Sugar Not Made By Slaves"-with these words on a sugar bowl, consumers of the early nineteenth century declared their power to change the global economy. Bronwen Everill examines how abolitionists in the Atlantic world shaped emerging ideas of ethical commerce to fight the system of plantation slavery that had become an engine of modern capitalism. How did consumers define ethical commerce? How did producers create markets for their products? Everill focuses on the everyday economy of the Atlantic world rather than on the more familiar boycott movements against slave-produced goods. Different approaches to making money in ethical commerce-through commercial agriculture, government contracts, international trade, and money management-shaped the relationship between production, consumption, and morality in ways that determined how slavery and freedom came to be defined in the market economy. Companies such as Macaulay & Babington in Sierra Leone, Roberts & Colson in Liberia, and Forster & Smith in the Gambia used commercial networks and government subsidies to make "legitimate" commerce pay. Ethical commerce was also promoted by former slaves in such organizations as the Colored Free Produce Society, which promoted the idea that consumers bore responsibility for the plight of the slave and could change their buying behavior. This book illuminates global consumer society and industrial capitalism at the turn of the nineteenth century, as well as underscores the roles of slavery and antislavery movements in the development of international capitalism. It also reminds us that concerns over fair trade and labor conditions remain relevant today"-- Provided by publisher
Notes Description based upon print version of record
Subject Business ethics -- Atlantic Ocean Region -- History -- 19th century
Capitalism -- Moral and ethical aspects -- Atlantic Ocean Region -- History -- 19th century
Consumption (Economics) -- Moral and ethical aspects -- Atlantic Ocean Region -- History -- 19th century
Antislavery movements -- Atlantic Ocean Region -- History -- 19th century
Social responsibility of business -- Atlantic Ocean Region -- History -- 19th century
HISTORY / United States / Civil War Period (1850-1877)
Antislavery movements
Business ethics
Capitalism -- Moral and ethical aspects
Commerce
Consumption (Economics) -- Moral and ethical aspects
Social responsibility of business
SUBJECT Atlantic Ocean Region -- Commerce -- History -- 19th century
Subject Atlantic Ocean Region
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 0674250095
9780674250093