Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
The race is not for the swift but who can endure
Undoubtedly the four territories under the acquisition of Britain comprising the
British Windward Islands indeed had a race to endure of which only the fittest of
the fittest could survive, and as such did have profound effects on their
development. The book entitled, Slavery, Law and Society in the British
Windward Islands 1763-1823, a Comparative Study by Bernard Marshall
analyses and examines the extent to which these territories were captivated by
using the law to protect the rich white minority while simultaneously exploiting
and degrading the black majority of the population of the British Windward
Islands. Bernard Marshall in his attempt to scrutinize the economic, social,
political and legal framework which bound the lives of the enslaved black
populations, free coloureds, and whites in the territories of St. Vincent, Tobago,
Dominica, Grenada and the Grenadines, highlights how the law has been used to
initiate social engineering of slave society in a significant period of Caribbean
history.
The book which was first published in 2007 with the ISBN 976-8189-27-4 diverts
its focus on the nature of the slave society and its development in the four ceded
Islands to Britain by France. This book is the first attempt to analyse the nature of
the slave society in these four communities during sixty critical years of slavery in
the Caribbean. It further examines the economic, political, social, religious and
legal organisation of society against a background of initial economic decline and
shows how it was affected by total dependence upon the institution of Negro
Slavery. Focusing on the period 1763 to 1823, Marshall compiles together the
history of these Windward Islands to build our understanding of their place in
imperial competition for wealth and power between the French and the British by
exploiting the poor. He analyses the social structure of their populations and the
relationships among the various groups and discusses the nature of resistance of
the enslaved population, particularly the maroons of Jamaica.
Even though this is a local case study, it is an important contribution to the
history of slavery in the Caribbean and in the New World in general. Bernard
crafted this piece of work by pooling both original documents and contemporary
result of the struggle between the ruling class and those who are ruled. The
state, which is the organized reflection of the interests of the ruling class, passes
laws that serve the interests of this domineering class.
In the British Windward Islands, whites of every rank were able to improve their
economic and social position by either purchasing, hiring or supervising the
labour of slaves. Again, their opportunities for political enhancement grew,
especially during the first two decades of the nineteenth century when because
of the decline in numbers of the white population, property qualifications for seats
on the Assembly were either ignored or abandoned in an effect to admit as many
whites as possible to the ruling since this strengthened white control of the
political system. Marshall gives an extensive and very meticulous description of
the conditions which the slaves operated under, working with insufficient food
attributable to the rising costs and falling prices of the sugar industry. This too
was brought about by the breaking of ties with the United States of America.
There is no law unless it be just.
- St Thomas Aquinas
Therefore the validity of the law depends on its justice. Who determines which
law is just or who really enforces law? Marshall in his comparative study failed to
concede and name the authority or authorities that enforced the law in these
territories being surveyed. While Bernard Marshall ensure to give a very
exhaustive reporting of how the enslaved populations were captivated and the
punishment they meted, he should have in the same breath evaluate the
possibility of a white person breaking the law. Would such a person be punished
accordingly or would a slave be punished for the crime (s) of that white
individual? Now tell me where the justice is in such a law. This is what Marshall
should have redirected his focus into, which would have been more substantive
than merely stating the punishment and conditions of the slave society in the
British Windward Islands. This is not to say that a clear image of what Marshall in
his attempt to communicate was not apparent in the mind of the reader.
In the powerful words of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (1881:5), The law embodies
the story of a nations development through many centuries and every legal
system stands in close correlation to the ideas, aims and purposes of society.
Marshalls rationalization of how the slave laws were used to contrive and have
power over the lives of the slaves was clearly a deliberate accomplishment, as it
speaks frankly to the laws which dictated the lives of the slaves and was
essentially highlighted and covered in the legal aspect of the book.
Nonetheless the development of the British Windward Islands was diluted due to
the unremitting ill-treatment of the slaves and the inequitable arbitration of the
justice system. Even though the law is said to reflect the intellectual, social,
economic, and political climate of its time, it is inseparable from the interests,
goals, and understandings that deeply shape or compromise social and
economic life. Thus it was imperative for Bernard Marshall to embrace in his
study the organization of the legal systems in the ceded Islands as it endow with
the legal development of that society. It is therefore said that the law and society
literature suggests that the more complex the society, the more differentiated the
legal system. Underlying this proposition is the notion that legal development is
conditioned by a series of integrative demands stemming from societys
economic, political, educational, and religious institutions.
In addition, Marshall confers details on the various court systems that were
current in the islands of St. Vincent, Tobago, Dominica, Grenada and the
Grenadines in an effort to draw attention to the separation of courts and its
impetus on the development of the slave society by including the wiles between
the Executive and Judiciary body. Nonetheless, corruption and discrimination
was still unbridled due to the fact that the court was consisted chiefly of the white
minority class jurors as slaves were not eligible.
With this being said, it is safe and sound to say that the law then was not only
used as a tool to exploit the black population and other enslaved individuals but
was also used as a tool to brain wash them into thinking that they were inferior
and it was manifested to be so. If this not being the case why then were the
whites admitted to sit as jurors in the court even though they were not educated
in the legal profession. Thus the reason for the laws being codified and not
written; they were permeated by customs, tradition, religious dogmas, and
values.
In addition, By codifying, preserving and enforcing certain key kinship
rules (usually descent and authority), religious rituals and dogmas, and the
chiefs right to enact laws, differences in power and privilege are preserved and