Scholarly Peer Reviewed Journal Articles on Global Slavery Past and Present
Leiden Slavery Studies Association
Journal of Global Slavery
NOW AVAILABLE! The Journal of Global Slavery (JGS) aims to advance and promote a greater understanding of slavery and post-slavery from comparative, transregional, and/or global perspectives. It especially underscores the global and globalizing nature of slavery in world history.
Equally a practise in which human beings were held captive for an indefinite period of time, coerced into extremely dependent and exploitive power relationships, denied rights (including potentially rights over their labor, lives, and bodies), could be bought and sold, were vulnerable to forced relocation by various means, and forced to labor against their will, slavery in ane form or another has existed in innumerable societies throughout history. JGS fosters a global view of slavery by integrating the latest scholarship from around the world and providing an interdisciplinary platform for scholars working on slavery in regions as diverse every bit ancient Rome, Pre-Colombian Mexico, Han dynasty China, the Ottoman Empire, the antebellum Us, and twenty-get-go-century Republic of mali.
The periodical likewise promotes a view of slavery as aglobalizing force in the development of world civilizations. Global history focuses heavily upon the global movement of people, goods, and ideas, with a detail emphasis on processes of integration and divergence in the human being experience. Slavery straddles all of these focal points, as information technology connected and integrated various societies through economic and power-based relationships, and simultaneously divided societies by grade, race, ethnicity, and cultural grouping.
JGS is a peer-reviewed periodical that publishes articles based on original research, book reviews, curt notes and communications, and special issues. It especially invites articles that situate studies of slavery (whether historical or modernistic-mean solar day forms) in explicitly comparative, transregional, and/or global contexts. Themes may include (merely are not express to):
- the different and changing social, cultural, and legal meanings of slavery across time and space;
- the roles that slavery has played in the development of intersecting and interdependent relationships betwixt societies throughout globe history;
- comparative practices of enslavement (through warfare, indebtedness, trade, etc.);
- human trafficking and forced migration;
- transregional dialogues and the motility of ideas and practices of slavery and anti-slavery beyond space;
- slave cultures and cultural transfer;
- political, economic, and ideological causes and furnishings of slavery;
- organized religion and slavery;
- resistance;
- abolition, emancipation, and manumission practices from global or comparative perspectives;
- the psychological effects, memories, legacies, and representations of slave practices.
See world wide web.brill.com/jgs for more information. Nosotros are besides on facebook.
Editorial Structure
Managing Editor:
Damian Alan Pargas (Leiden University)
Reviews Editor:
Benedetta Rossi (University of Birmingham)
Area Editors:
Sub-Saharan Africa (contemporary): Eric Hahonou (University of Roskilde)
Sub-Saharan Africa (historical): Olatunji Ojo (Brock University)
Asia: Kerry Ward (Rice University)
Almost Due east and N Africa: Ismael Montana (Northern Illinois University)
Europe/Mediterranean: Jeff Fynn-Paul (Leiden University)
Americas (Latin America): Alex Borucki (Academy of California – Irvine)
Americas (Caribbean area): Karwan Fatah-Black (Leiden University)
*Submissions on North American slavery will be handled by the chief editor
Advisory Board:
Pamela Crossley (Dartmouth College)
Seymour Drescher (University of Pittsburgh)
Stanley Engerman (University of Rochester)
Roquinaldo Ferreira (Brown University)
Luuk de Ligt (Leiden University)
Paul Lovejoy (York Academy)
Ugo Nwokeji (University of California – Berkeley)
Ehud R. Toledano (Tel Aviv University)
Nigel Worden (Academy of Greatcoat Town)
John David Smith (University of North Carolina – Charlotte)
Jennifer Glancy (Le Moyne College)
Aurelia Martín Casares (University of Granada)
Robert Ross (Leiden University)confirmed
Omar H. Ali (University of North Carolina at Greensboro)
Junius P. Rodriguez (Eureka Higher)
Holger Weiss (Abo Akademie University)
Richard Eaton (University of Arizona)
Edward A. Alpers (UCLA)
Richard B. Allen (Framingham State Academy)
Debra Blumenthal (UC-Santa Barbara)
Stefan Haβ (Freie Universität Berlin)
Felicitas Becker (Cambridge University)
Joel Quirk (University of Witwatersrand)
Marcus Carvalho (Universidade Federal de Pernambuco)
Beatrice Nicolini (Universittá Catolica del Sacro Cuoro, Milan)
Konstantinos Vlassopoulos (Academy of Nottingham)
Abdelilah Benmlih (University of Fès)
Ana Frega (Universidad de la República, Montevideo)
Milton Guran (Universidade de Brasilia)
Jesús Guanche Peréz (Universidad de Habana)
Jean Allain (Queen's Academy Belfast)
Source: https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/humanities/institute-for-history/leiden-slavery-studies-association/journal-of-global-slavery
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