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  2. Paternalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paternalism

    Paternalism is action that limits a person's or group's liberty or autonomy and is intended to promote their own good. [1] Paternalism can also imply that the behavior is against or regardless of the will of a person, or also that the behavior expresses an attitude of superiority. [2]

  3. The Slave Community - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Slave_Community

    Ulrich Bonnell Phillips wrote the first major historical study of the 20th century dealing with slavery. In American Negro Slavery (1918), Phillips refers to slaves as "negroes, who for the most part were by racial quality submissive rather than defiant, light-hearted instead of gloomy, amiable and ingratiating instead of sullen, and whose very defects invited paternalism rather than repression."

  4. Slavery as a positive good in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_as_a_positive_good...

    In his famous Mudsill Speech (1858), Hammond articulated the pro-slavery political argument during the period at which the ideology was at its most mature (late 1830s – early 1860s). [17] Along with John C. Calhoun, Hammond believed that the bane of many past societies was the existence of the class of the landless poor.

  5. A Treatise on the Patriarchal, or Co-operative System of Society

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Treatise_on_the...

    According to Kingsley, a slave state is more powerful in case of war. [1]: 42 He examines other "slave holding states". In the case of Brazil, the war between Brazil and "the Republic of Buenos Ayres" (he refers to the Cisplatine War) shows the strength of a slave state contrasted with the weakness of a white antislave state. The Brazilian ...

  6. Wage slavery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wage_slavery

    According to Mark Michael Smith of the Economic History Society, "although intrusive and oppressive, paternalism, the way masters employed it, and the methods slaves used to manipulate it, rendered slaveholders' attempts to institute capitalistic work regimens on their plantation ineffective and so allowed slaves to carve out a degree of autonomy".

  7. The Peculiar Institution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Peculiar_Institution

    The book describes and analyzes multiple facets of slavery in the American South from the 17th through the mid-19th century, including demographics, lives of slaves and slaveholders, the Southern economy and labor systems, the Northern and abolitionist response, slave trading, and political issues of the time.

  8. George Fitzhugh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Fitzhugh

    George Fitzhugh (November 4, 1806 – July 30, 1881) was an American social theorist who published racial and slavery-based social theories in the antebellum era.He argued that the negro was "but a grown up child" [2] [3] needing the economic and social protections of slavery.

  9. Libertarian paternalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertarian_paternalism

    Libertarian paternalism is the idea that it is both possible and legitimate for private and public institutions to affect behavior while also respecting freedom of choice, as well as the implementation of that idea.