
By JEAN ALLAIN
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Additional info for The Nineteenth Century Law of the Sea and the British Abolition of the Slave Trade
Example text
See Hertslet, above n , . Miers, above n , . Montardy, above n , –. Miers, above n , . For the Instructions see Documents relatives à la Répression de la Traite (n above). Queneuil, above n , . Syllabus, “The Muscat Dhows Case between France and Great Britain”, James Brown Scott (ed), The Hague Court Reports, , . Article , General Act of the Brussels Conference relative to the African Slave Trade, July , Hertslet, above n , .
British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society, The Slave-Trade Conference at Brussels and the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society, , . “Sur les anciens orders religieux-militaires et la possibilité d’une association du même gendre pour l’abolition de l’esclavage, dans les contrées Barbares de l’Afrique” in Cardinal Lavigerie, Documents sur la Foundation de l’oeuvre Antiescalvagiste (Belin et fils, St Cloud, ), –. Miers, above n , . org by guest on February 16, 2011 Great Britain was satisfied with the outcome of the Berlin Conference and saw little reason to push States further with regard to the suppression of the slave trade, though the trade on the east coast of Africa, in places such as Zanzibar and Pemba, was starting to raise difficulties with other European Powers.
Brazil and Portugal were unable to resist muscular interventions by the Royal Navy and joined the burgeoning web of bilateral treaties; France and the United States could not be cajoled so easily. Despite French reservations regarding visitation under the General Act, the slave trade was, by this time, clearly in its last throes. Through its bilateral network, Great Britain had managed to abolish the Atlantic Slave Trade by . The limited possessions of France in the zone where the slave trade persisted and its lack of willingness to ascribe to the right to visit established by the Brussels Act slowed the momentum towards complete suppression of the slave trade at sea.