Notes to Contributors

Q2 Social Sciences Children Australia Pub Date : 2023-06-16 DOI:10.1017/s0312897000018762
Patrick T. Barker, K. Eccles, Julian Cresser, Tennyson S. D. Joseph
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Abstract

Abstract:As scholars have long shown, provision grounds and dooryard gardens were crucial to enslaved people's survival and economic lives in many slave societies in the greater Caribbean. This article draws on both old and new evidence to explore the British colony of Trinidad's late-slavery provision ground system from below. It analyses plantation records, the Port of Spain Gazette, government slave punishment returns, planter and imperial correspondence, slave codes, and enslaved people's legal complaints from the nineteenth century to provide a more detailed portrait of the challenges of food cultivation under slavery in the years leading to abolition. Foregrounding scarcity as the common experience in the island's provision ground system, it argues that enslaved labourers risked punishment to deploy a range of adaptive and sometimes illicit labour and land management strategies to properly cultivate their grounds under the constraints imposed upon them by plantation authorities. Furthermore, it shows how in the amelioration era, despite the odds being stacked against them, enslaved people found ways to strategically negotiate the office of The Protector of Slaves to retain rightful access to productive land and to protect their cultivation time and produce.
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摘要:正如学者们长期以来所表明的那样,在大加勒比地区的许多奴隶社会中,供应地和庭院花园对被奴役者的生存和经济生活至关重要。本文借鉴新旧证据,从以下几个方面探讨英国殖民地特立尼达岛晚期奴隶制的供给地制度。它分析了19世纪的种植园记录、《西班牙港公报》、政府对奴隶的惩罚回报、种植园主和帝国的信件、奴隶法典以及被奴役者的法律投诉,以更详细地描述奴隶制下粮食种植在废除奴隶制前几年面临的挑战。它将稀缺性视为该岛供应地系统的常见经验,认为被奴役的劳工冒着受到惩罚的风险,部署了一系列适应性的、有时是非法的劳动力和土地管理战略,在种植园当局强加给他们的限制下,适当地耕种他们的土地。此外,它还表明,在改良时代,尽管困难重重,被奴役的人还是找到了与奴隶保护者办公室进行战略谈判的方法,以保留合法的生产土地,并保护他们的耕种时间和产品。
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Children Australia
Children Australia SOCIAL WORK-
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