Edited by David Ryden
Economic Challenges: British West Indian planters faced rising slave prices, higher provisioning costs, and warfare on the high seas, making sugar planting increasingly costly.
Political and Social Threats: Planters were anxious about slave uprisings and the anti-slave trade movement, which threatened their industry.
Pro-Slavery Arguments: Pro-slavery writers defended the slave trade using arguments based on mercantilism, imperialism, and humanitarianism, emphasizing national wealth and security.
References: The document includes various pamphlets and reports defending the slave trade, providing insight into 18th-century attitudes toward race, work, and power.
London Pickering & Chatto, 2003, 428 pages