The award winning thesis focussed on Post-Emancipation systems of labour
control using a comparative analysis of the United States, from 1865 to
'Redemption' in 1877, & the British Caribbean colonies of Belize &
Jamaica, from Emancipation in 1838 until Crown Colony rule, 1871 for
Belize, & 1866 for Jamaica. The purpose being to highlight the
differences & similarities, & further an understanding of why certain
historical phenomena occurred in 1 or 2 regions & not in another. The
fundamental argument being that there was no simple step from slavery to
freedom. That the local oligarchies in each region attempted to prevent,
the former 'Negro' slaves from attaining full freedom, economically or
politically, after Emancipation; tackling the extent to which they were
prepared to go with coercive tactics to achieve their aims, using a
variety of primary/secondary sources. Thus, the transition was not from
slavery to freedom but from one system of labour controls to another,
maintaining a de facto slavery.