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revolution etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
revolution etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

Gaffield on international law after the Haitian Revolution

 Julia Gaffield (Georgia State University) has published "The Racialization of International Law after the Haitian Revolution: The Holy See and National Sovereignty" in the American Historical Review, 125:3 (June 2020), 841-68. Here's the abstract: 

The Haitian state shaped international definitions of sovereignty and national legitimacy after the Declaration of Independence in 1804. Haiti’s nineteenth century was not a period of isolation and decline; its first six decades were globally connected because the country’s leaders challenged their postcolonial inequality with diplomacy and state formation. This strategy aimed to establish Haiti’s membership in the “family of nations,” a central metaphor in European and American diplomatic, legal, and religious decision-making. In doing so, the Haitian state forced the Atlantic powers to redefine the boundaries of international relations. Haiti’s decades-long negotiations with the Catholic Church were tied to the racialization of the global hierarchy. After its Declaration of Independence, the Haitian state began clearing a theoretical path toward recognized sovereignty based on the dominant narrative that a society must be considered “civilized” on the world stage. But, as it cultivated internal policies and practices that rejected the dominant racist assumptions, these discriminatory ideologies became increasingly more explicit in international law.

Further information is available here

--Mitra Sharafi

During and after the Revolution, why did the emancipation of slaves proceed very slowly in the northern states?

  • The northern states gave priority to slaveholders' property rights so that emancipation often was spaced out over several slave generations.

  • Very few northerners saw any contradiction between freedom for themselves and slavery for African Americans. 

  • Slaves were threatening violence in the northern states, causing many whites to retreat from their earlier willingness to support rapid emancipation.

  • Economically, slavery was becoming more viable and profitable in the North in the 1770s and early 1780s.

ANSWER: During and after the Revolution, The northern states gave priority to slaveholders' property rights so that emancipation often was spaced out over several slave generations.