Unfree labour

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    Over 14.2 million people in the world are suffering from some form of labor trafficking ("Labor Trafficking"). Labor trafficking is when individuals provide some sort of labor or services, through the use of force. Most of the victims are being manipulated, lied to, threatened, or given an unfair pay. The victims are put into poor working conditions and have a hard time getting out. Of the 14.2 million people in forced labor seventy three percent are adults and the other twenty seven percent are…

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    During colonial America, lying on the eastern side of the continent were the New England colonies in the north and the Chesapeake colonies in the south. New England colonies composed states such as MA, RI, and CT while Chesapeake colonies contain states like MD, VA and the Carolinas. With these two colonies separated, they share similarities as well as differences. Slavery, politics and religion are the most important key facts that have a common aspect among New England and Chesapeake colonies.…

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    Indentured Servants vs. Slaves The colonist’s interest in agriculture increased when John Rolfe learned that tobacco seeds flourished in Virginia. Tobacco requires year-round labor and close attention. The colonists soon needed more hands to work on this demanding crop. Indentured servants played a huge part in helping the colonists take care of the tobacco and other jobs they had. In 1619, African American slaves were captured in Angola. They also contributed to the well-being of the tobacco…

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    Colonist Conditions

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    The New World was known to be the Western hemisphere of the Earth. The New World consisted of the 13 British colonies. Colonists did not have much freedom, if any at all, before coming to the New World. The New World was said to provide the colonists with freedom and many opportunities (Voices of Freedom, Foner). There are at least five different conditions that brought colonists into the world that revolved around freedom. Freedom for the colonists included having religious freedom. Religious…

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    Slavery In The 1600's

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    Slavery developed in the United States in the early 1600’s. Slavery came to exist due to an economic need for an increased labor force due to the popularity of cash crops in global trade. the price of indentured servants was becoming too costly and Demands for labor were increasing at a growing rate.as the demands for labor grew so did the price of indentured servants. The colonies were expanding which called for skilled workers in the colonies, a position that was to be filled by already…

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    In the early sixteenth century, the English began the colonization of North America by establishing colonies in New England and in the South. These two regions were very different from one-another and thus provided the colonists with very different challenges. Due to environmental factors such as soil quality and the need for cheap labor, the New England colonies and the Southern colonies were forced to find different economic solutions that would allow them to flourish and survive. The…

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    Indentured Servants

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    The lives of Servants and Slaves Indentured servants are different from slaves, but they are similar in some ways. During the 1600s the planters had a choice whether to own a servant or slave. Servants looked forward to a brighter future. On the other hand, slaves had no hope. All slaves and servants were farmers. The lives of servants and slaves were very similar. They both had physical punishment from their masters. They both worked for no money and with no control over their lives.…

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    1. INDENTURED SERVANTS: Colonists who exchanged up to seven years of work for the entry to America and a chance at a superior life there. Indentured servants were the essential wellspring of work in America (pg. 61). While in the colony, the indentured servants needed to tend to the place that is known for the estate and plant the crops. Once the contractually bound slave's agreement was fulfilled, they were to get a real estate parcel of their own and appreciate the advantages of owning the…

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    Indentured servants that came into the new world faced many struggles. Firstly, they often faced a lack of sufficient food due to the small amounts that were provided to them or the inability to obtain the food. Also, they had risk of getting diseases like scurvy and others that make the body weak. Poverty was also a result of their work. Many indentured servants had hopes of money but often struggled to have clothing or buy things like alcohol. Also, indentured servants were often in danger of…

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    During the period 1607s and 1800s, as transatlantic trade opened up to the English colonies in North America, the primary purpose of creating Virginia was making money not for the desire of freedom. With the introduction of marketable tobacco before 17th century, indentured servants were the early affordable/cheap labor sources for colonies tobacco plantations. They were the poor English landless peasants contracted and recruited to work on the colonies’ tobacco plantations. After they worked…

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