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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. Slavery is a social ill that transpired virtually since man's first step on the timeline of existence. As with any species, pecking order of caste system establishes who resides at which end; those without social status, power or wealth occupy the bottom and are often forced to endure inhumane treatment at the hands of their own people. The extent to which slavery has continued forth throughout the centuries is indicative of a component of man's social system that - despite best efforts from myriad civil and human rights advocates - has not only perpetuated sometimes in silence but will always remain deeply imbedded in the fabric of humanity's structure. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCSlaveFree.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
those without social status, power or wealth occupy the bottom and are often forced to endure inhumane treatment at the hands of their own people. The extent to which
slavery has continued forth throughout the centuries is indicative of a component of mans social system that - despite the best efforts given from myriad civil and human rights advocates
in the past - has not only perpetuated oftentimes in complete silence but will always remain deeply imbedded within the fabric of humanitys structure. "Those of us who are
privileged to live in freedom must recognise that freedom is indivisible and there is no way we can deeply enjoy our freedom while others are enduring slavery in its various
forms" (Moore et al 18). For nearly four hundred years, between 1492 and 1870, eleven million Africans were systematically seized from their
homelands and forced into slavery during what came to be the peak of the Atlantic slave trade, with approximately five hundred thousand heading for the United States. The inhumane
treatment these oppressed individuals received throughout the journey was ultimately responsible for some ten million deaths en route (Brown A05). When the Reconstruction
Period arrived, it looked as though blacks were going to regain their inherent rights as free citizens alongside the emancipation that had already taken place; however, it actually proved to
represent a time of much disappointment for many. It was not a lack of laws in place to protect blacks from the injustices once faced, but the already-free white
citizens - who granted themselves all-encompassing social, political and economic rights - often ignored those laws. The provisions, as they were called, were meant to provide blacks with the
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