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Measuring the Immeasurable: The Atlantic Slave Trade, West African Population and the Pyrrhonian Critic1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Extract
No problem has exercised Africanists for so long and so heatedly as the slave trade. Now that any difference of opinion as to its morality has ended, debate tends to concentrate on its economic and political aspects, particularly on its magnitude and regional characteristics. In the past few scholarly generations, sophisticated statistical manipulations have supplied more evidence, but it has been concentrated on the number of slaves who arrived in the New World. Nonetheless, dearth of evidence (sometimes total) regarding the other components of the trade has not seemed to discourage efforts to arrive at global figures and, by extension, to determine its effects on African societies.
The present paper asks why this should be so, and wonders how any defensible conclusions can ever be reached about almost any facet of the trade that can go beyond ideology or truism. It concludes that no global estimate of the slave trade, or of any ‘underdevelopment’ or ‘underpopulation’ it may have caused, are possible, though carefully constructed micro-studies might provide limited answers. Under the circumstances, to believe or advocate any particular set or range of figures becomes an act of faith rather than an epistemologically sound decision
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References
2 Pierre Bayle, Dictionnaire historique et critique (3rd rev. ed., Rotterdam, 1720), ii, 1291, s.v. Goulu, note F.
3 Nevertheless, I agree emphatically with the point made by Cordell, Dennis and Gregory, Joel, ‘Historical demography and demographic history in Africa: theoretical and methodological considerations’, Canadian Journal of African Studies, xiv (1980), 391–3Google Scholar, that historical demography intrinsically, if not always in practice, is concerned with much more than the numbers.
4 For instance, I have felt obliged to ignore the question of possible changes in the population structure of West African societies resulting from the slave trade. Such studies can be regarded as unexceptionable to the extent that they do not require allegiance to any particular range of population figures but only to the idea that, if left to their own devices, West African populations would have shown structures similar to those of other pre-industrial societies (and perhaps to certain African societies during the colonial period, when labour migration must have replicated some of the conditions during the slave trade).
5 To my chagrin it has not proved possible here to attempt more than a series of observations which claim to do no more than emphasize the tenuous nature of the various beliefs about almost every aspect of the slave trade. I have not been able to confront many particular arguments and I have generally ignored (although not forgotten) the work being done for other parts of Africa beyond the extent to which it might throw light on the issues considered here for West Africa. For this I am grateful to be able to refer to Paul Lovejoy's recent and most useful summing up of the current status questionis, Lovejoy, P., ‘The volume of the Atlantic slave trade: a synthesis’, J. Afr. Hist, xxiii (1982), 473–501.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Among other things, Lovejoy captures nicely the diversity of opinion.
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9 On the basis of which (to cite but one example) L.-M. Diop has expressed the belief that ‘une forte proportion’ of the Atlantic slave trade operated through clandestine traders. See her ‘Le sous-peuplement de l'Afrique noire’, Bulletin de l'lnstitut Fondamental de l'Afrique Noire, sér. B, xl (1978), 737.
10 As simply the numerical difference between the number who boarded ship in West Africa and the number who debarked in the New World, this figure would not take into account at what point during the voyage slaves died (or tended to die) or whether they died from shipboard circumstances or from conditions acquired while still in Africa. This is discussed by, among others, Miller, Joseph C., ‘Mortality in the Atlantic slave trade: statistical evidence on causality’, J. Interdisciplinary History, xi (1983/1984), 385–423.Google Scholar
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47 This contretemps is discussed in Henige, ‘ If pigs could fly’.
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49 Diop, ‘Sous-peuplement’, 734–5
50 Ibid. 738.
51 Ibid. 744. Perhaps Diop overplays her hand when she argues in support of her thesis that seventeenth-century maps of Africa featured no ‘lacunae’, or refers to ‘the agriculture practices and mentality of black people’, or rhapsodizes about the nutritional superiority of yams, sorghum, and millet. For more, see now Population XL (1985), 855–9.
52 Inikori, ‘Under-population’, 303–4. For all of Africa Inikori (‘Introduction’, 33) has recently suggested a figure of 112 million for potential losses.
53 Inikori, ‘Under-population’, 298–300; Diop, ‘Sous-peuplement’, 726–8, believes that droughts, famines, and diseases were probably less common in pre-colonial Africa than in contemporary Europe.
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59 Inikori, ‘Under-population’, 297–8.
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