Anne Ruderman (Author)
Marlous van Waijenburg (Author)
The revocation of the Royal African Company's (RAC) monopoly in 1698 inaugurated a transformation of the transatlantic slave trade. While the RAC's exit from the slave trade has received scholarly attention, little is known about the company's response to the loss of its trading privileges. Not only did the end of the company's monopoly increase competition, but the unprecedented numbers of private traders who entered the trade exacerbated the company's principal-agent problems on the West African coast. To analyze the company's behavior in the post-monopoly period, we exploit a series of 292 instruction letters that the RAC issued to its slave-ship captains between 1685 and 1706, coding each individual command in the letters. Our database reveals two new insights into the company's response to its upended competitive landscape. First, the RAC showed a remarkable degree of organizational flexibility, reacting to a heightened principal-agent problem. Second, its response was facilitated by the infrastructure of the transatlantic slave trade, which gave the company a monitoring mechanism by virtue of the slave-ship captains who continually sailed to the West African coast.
...MoreArticle Editors (Summer 2023) Editor's Note. Business History Review (pp. 195-198).
Article
Nicholas Radburn;
(Summer 2023)
The British Gunpowder Industry and the Transatlantic Slave Trade
(/isis/citation/CBB139174713/)
Book
David Richardson;
(2022)
Principles and Agents: the British slave trade and its abolition
(/isis/citation/CBB104965625/)
Book
Joshua D. Rothman;
(2021)
The ledger and the chain : How domestic slave traders shaped America
(/isis/citation/CBB095360247/)
Book
John Harris;
(2020)
The last slave ships : New York and the end of the middle passage
(/isis/citation/CBB574560992/)
Article
Mary E. Hicks;
(Summer 2023)
Captivity's Commerce: The Theory and Methodology of Slaving and Capitalism
(/isis/citation/CBB191623786/)
Article
Rob Johnstone;
(2020)
From Georgian traders to Victorian glass makers: The evolution of the Chance family business and its role in developing glass manufacturing
(/isis/citation/CBB328901722/)
Book
Herman L. Bennett;
(2018)
African Kings and Black Slaves: Sovereignty and Dispossession in the Early Modern Atlantic
(/isis/citation/CBB095146494/)
Article
Benjamin Breen;
(2022)
Where There’s Smoke, There’s Fire: Pyric Technologies and African Pipes in the Early Modern World
(/isis/citation/CBB843102085/)
Book
Jane T. Merritt;
(2017)
The Trouble with Tea: The Politics of Consumption in the Eighteenth- Century Global Economy
(/isis/citation/CBB065545464/)
Book
Jennifer L. (Jennifer Lyle) Morgan;
(2021)
Reckoning with slavery : Gender, kinship, and capitalism in the early Black Atlantic
(/isis/citation/CBB903439529/)
Book
Thomas M. Truxes;
(2021)
The overseas trade of British America : A narrative history
(/isis/citation/CBB160740165/)
Article
Sarah Lubelski;
(2022)
The Bentley Schema: Inside a Newly Industrialized Firm
(/isis/citation/CBB403135196/)
Book
Robert Bickers;
(2020)
China Bound: John Swire & Sons and Its World, 1816–1980
(/isis/citation/CBB392202083/)
Book
Fahad Ahmad Bishara;
(2017)
A Sea of Debt: Law and Economic Life in the Western Indian Ocean, 1780–1950
(/isis/citation/CBB581190849/)
Article
Stephanie Decker;
(Winter 2018)
Africanization in British Multinationals in Ghana and Nigeria, 1945–1970
(/isis/citation/CBB634924349/)
Article
Carolyn Roberts;
(Summer 2023)
Pharmaceutical Captivity, Epistemological Rupture, and the Business Archive of the British Slave Trade
(/isis/citation/CBB777187109/)
Article
Paul E Sampson;
(2023)
“The lungs of a ship”: Ventilation, acclimatization, and labor in the maritime environment, 1740–1800
(/isis/citation/CBB761312607/)
Article
Peter M. Solar;
Klas Rönnbäck;
(2015)
Copper sheathing and the British slave trade
(/isis/citation/CBB786137923/)
Article
Christopher M. Blakley;
(2022)
Ship fever, confinement, and the racialization of disease
(/isis/citation/CBB315850047/)
Article
Justene Hill Edwards;
(Summer 2023)
“This Slavery Business Is a Horrible Thing”: The Economy of American Slavery in the Lives of the Enslaved
(/isis/citation/CBB844471613/)
Be the first to comment!