@article { , title = {Cultures of exchange: Atlantic Africa in the era of the slave trade}, abstract = {Cultural factors have often been invoked to explain parliament's decision in 1807 to outlaw slave carrying by British subjects but they have only infrequently been cited in efforts to explain why the Atlantic slave trade itself became so large in the three centuries preceding 1807. This paper seeks to redress this imbalance by looking at ways in which inter-cultural dialogue between Africans and Europeans and related adjustments in social values and adaptations of African institutional arrangements may contribute to improving our understanding of the huge growth in market transactions in enslaved people in Atlantic Africa before 1807. In exploring such issues, the paper draws on important theoretical insights from new institutional economics, notably the work of Douglass North. It also attempts to show how institutionally and culturally based developments in transatlantic slave trafficking, the largest arena of cross-cultural exchange in the Atlantic world before 1850, may themselves help to promote understanding of the much broader historical processes that underpin economic change and the creation of the modern world.}, doi = {10.1017/s0080440109990089}, eissn = {1474-0648}, issn = {0080-4401}, journal = {Transactions of the Royal Historical Society}, pages = {151-179}, publicationstatus = {Published}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, url = {https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/463833}, volume = {19}, keyword = {History}, year = {2009}, author = {Richardson, David} }