Masters, servants, and magistrates in Britain and the Empire, 1562-1955 /

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Hay, Douglas (Editor, Contributor), Craven, Paul, 1950- (Editor, Contributor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, [2004]
Series:Studies in legal history.
UNC Press law publications.
Slavery in America and the world: history, culture & law.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to the full text of this electronic book
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction / Douglas Hay and Paul Craven
  • England, 1562-1875: the law and its uses / Douglas Hay
  • Early British America, 1585-1830: freedom bound / Christopher Tomlins
  • Law and labor in eighteenth-century Newfoundland / Jerry Bannister
  • Canada, 1670-1935: symbolic and instrumental enforcement in Loyalist North America / Paul Craven
  • Australia, 1788-1902: a workingman's paradise? / Michael Quinlan
  • The Colonial Office, 1820-1955: constantly the subject of small struggles / M.K. Banton
  • The British Caribbean, 1823-1838: the transition from slave to free legal status / Mary Turner
  • Urban British Guiana, 1838-1924: wharf rats, centipedes, and pork knockers / Juanita de Barros
  • South Africa, 1841-1924: race, contract, and coercion / Martin Chanock
  • Hong Kong, 1841-1870: all the servants in prison and nobody to take care of the house / Christopher Munn
  • Britain: the defeat of the 1844 master and servants bill / Christopher Frank
  • India, 1858-1930: the illusion of free labor / Michael Anderson
  • Assam and the West Indies, 1860-1920: immobilizing plantation labor / Prabhu P. Mohapatra
  • West Africa, 1874-1948: employment legislation in a nonsettler peasant economy / Richard Rathbone
  • Kenya, 1895-1939: registration and rough justice / David M. Anderson.