DONDENA Seminar - Marie Beigelman
Room 3-B3-SR01 - Via Roentgen, 1
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You may follow the seminar at the following link.
“Sugar, Hardship, and Aftermath of Slavery”
SPEAKER: Marie Beigelman (King's College).
ABSTRACT:
Colonial slavery was not a monolithic institution: sugarcane plantations were deadlier and more violent than coffee or cotton plantations. How did heterogeneity in the experience of slavery shape post-emancipation immediate disadvantages? Using a novel, individual-level dataset covering the universe of formerly enslaved people in the French West Indies immediately after emancipation in 1848, I follow two generations into freedom and explore how within-slavery heterogeneity in exposure to sugarcane affected intergenerational outcomes. I exploit a unique institutional feature of distinctive surname giving at emancipation to link families to their former parish of enslavement. Sugarcane exposure generated two opposing forces: economic advantages through skill acquisition, but worse intergenerational health through non-economic channels. Children born free whose fathers were enslaved in the most sugarcane-intensive parishes face a 40% higher risk of death before age five. This effect is concentrated when fathers are physically present, pointing to negative paternal inputs rather than absent ones. Exploiting within-parish, across-cohort variation in parents’ exposure to hardship when enslaved, I show these intergenerational effects stem from past experience of extreme hardship. Criminal records confirm that men from extreme sugarcane parishes were disproportionately convicted for violence against women and children.
BIO:
Marie is a lecturer in Economics and Policy at the Department of Political Economy. She was previously a research fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies at the Toulouse School of Economics. She primarily works in political economy, economic history, and development with applied machine learning methods for archival processing. Her current projects explore the lasting consequences of violence during colonial slavery in the Caribbean, and gender-based violence in contemporary settings.