Studies and researches
Vol. 12 Issue 1 - 6/2020
Slavery and Liberalism in the Empire of Brazil (1822-1889): Historical and Legal Aspects of an Incoherent Relation
This
article aims to contribute to studies that analyse the concepts of liberalism
and its theoretical limits. Our background is the construction of the Empire of
Brazil (1822 - 1889), specifically through the Constitution of 1824 in which
the defence of individual freedom, civil and property rights were central
points of its formulation. This liberal-biased Constitution coexisted with the
restriction of the freedom of some, the enslaved, imposed by others, the slave
owners. This maintenance of slavery coexisting with the ideals of liberalism
could create the impression of a falsification of liberal ideas. The scope of
this paper is to analyse how the bases of slavery inherited from the colonial
period were able to fit into a new liberal political structure. The research
indicates that the end of slavery without any reparations to the former slaves
generated social implications as discrimination based on race and persistent
inequalities still relevant for modern day Brazil and that the apparent
incoherence was not in the association of slavery and liberalism, but in the
supposed dichotomy created between these two concepts.
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Keywords:
liberalism, slavery, Brazil, empire, racism
liberalism, slavery, Brazil, empire, racism