Contribution of Enslaved Labor to the British Industrial Revolution
The labor of enslaved people provided two critical inputs for Britain's Industrial Revolution. Raw cotton, the primary material for the textile industry, was sourced from slave plantations in North America. Concurrently, sugar produced by enslaved workers in the British West Indies supplied essential calories to feed the growing industrial workforce, which had migrated from farms to manufacturing centers.
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Ch.2 User-centered design process - User Experience Design - Winter 23 @ UI Design in UI @ University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
UI Design in UI @ University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
User Experience Design - Winter 23 @ UI Design in UI @ University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
UI @ University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
User Experience Design @ UI Design in UI @ University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
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Contribution of Enslaved Labor to the British Industrial Revolution
A key factor in the economic transformation of 18th and 19th-century Britain was its powerful global presence. Which of the following statements best analyzes the dual role this global position played in fostering its manufacturing boom?
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Match each element related to Britain's Industrial Revolution with the specific role its geopolitical dominance allowed it to play.
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Arrange the following events into a logical sequence that illustrates the process by which Britain's global power fueled its industrial specialization.
By leveraging its global power to secure both inexpensive inputs (like raw cotton and food calories) and guaranteed foreign buyers for its finished goods, Britain was able to pursue a strategy of industrial ________ in sectors like textile manufacturing.
A historian makes the following claim: "Without its dominant global position, Britain's industrialization would have been impossible. The entire enterprise depended on extracting cheap materials from abroad and forcing its manufactured goods upon captive foreign markets." Which of the following statements provides the most accurate and nuanced evaluation of this historian's claim?
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From an economic standpoint, the system of forced labor in the Americas, supplied by the Atlantic slave trade, was perpetuated primarily because it allowed plantation owners to:
The historical system that operated from the 16th to the 19th centuries, involving the forced transportation of millions of people from Africa to the Americas for work, is best analyzed as an economic system based on which of the following principles?
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From the perspective of a 17th-century European merchant heavily invested in American plantations, which of the following statements would best represent the primary economic justification for the system of forced labor supplied by the Atlantic slave trade, despite its inherent inefficiencies and high human cost?
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The Atlantic slave trade can be economically characterized as a market transaction based on voluntary exchange, since European traders provided goods to some African leaders in return for the provision of labor.
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Match each leg of the triangular trade system associated with the Atlantic slave trade to the primary economic goods or labor that were transported along that route.
In the economic framework of the Atlantic slave trade, the primary bargaining tool for an enslaved individual to improve their material well-being was their ability to refuse work and seek alternative employment.
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Match each economic actor or entity involved in the Atlantic trade system of the 16th to 19th centuries with their primary economic role or outcome within that system.
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Within the economic framework of the Atlantic slave trade from the 16th to 19th centuries, enslaved individuals were legally and economically classified not as workers selling their labor, but as a form of property known as ________.
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From an economic perspective, the system of trade that characterized the Atlantic slave trade between the 16th and 19th centuries involved a multi-stage process. Arrange the following stages into the correct logical sequence, representing the typical flow of goods and forced labor in the triangular trade.
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Economic Impact of Enslaved Labor on British Industry
Which of the following statements best analyzes the dual role that the labor of enslaved people in the Americas played in fueling the British Industrial Revolution?
Match each commodity, produced through the forced labor of enslaved people in the Americas, with its specific economic role in fueling the British Industrial Revolution.
True or False: While the production of cotton by enslaved people provided essential raw materials for British factories, the increased availability of sugar, also produced by enslaved labor, had a negligible impact on the productivity of the industrial workforce.
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