EBOOK Slave Trade and the Origins of International Human Rights Law

ISBN
9780199753079
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Opis


Jenny Martinez shows in this groundbreaking volume that the international human        rights movement has its roots in one of the nineteenth century's central moral        causes: the movement to ban the international slave trade. Martinez focuses in        particular on the international admiralty courts, which tried the crews of captured        slave ships. The courts, which were based in the Caribbean, West Africa, Cape Town,        and Brazil, helped free at least 80,000 Africans from captured slavers between 1807        and 1871. Here, buried in the dusty archives of admiralty courts, ships' logs, and        the British foreign office, Martinez uncovers the foundations of contemporary human        rights law: international courts targeting states and non-state transnational actors        while working on behalf the world's most persecuted peoples--captured West Africans        bound for the slave plantations of the Americas. Fueled by a powerful thesis and        novel evidence, Martinez's work will reshape the fields of human rights history and        international human rights law.