Aaron Graham
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The formation of the penal laws and slave codes in Ireland and the British Caribbean, c. 1680–c. 1720
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This chapter compares the creation of the penal laws and slave codes in Ireland and the Caribbean respectively as codes of law for social repression. Both were products of negotiations between imperial and colonial groups, and developed as accumulations of laws, practices and precedents through the operation of colonial legislative power. They therefore reflected the unevenness of power in early modern empires, described by Lauren Benton as a ‘search for sovereignty’. A comparison of the most egregious set of punishments in both sets of laws – castration – shows how these measures were driven by colonial interests for social or political reasons, and intermittently opposed by the British Government, often for its own pragmatic reasons. Because imperial power was so uneven, the experience of subaltern peoples in Ireland and the Caribbean therefore varied greatly, but in both cases reflected a common political dynamic.

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Ireland, slavery and the Caribbean

Interdisciplinary perspectives

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