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This comprehensive volume examines the evolution of slavery practices across Atlantic Africa from pre-colonial times through the 19th century. Drawing on oral traditions, colonial archives, and contemporary ethnographic work, the authors reconstruct networks of trade, captivity, and resistance.
This doctoral dissertation investigates the economic logics of Atlantic slave trade networks, focusing on the Gulf of Guinea's role as a major source of enslaved persons. It combines quantitative analysis of slave ship manifests with qualitative oral history interviews.