1 Franklin Knight and Margaret Crahan (eds), Africa and the Caribbean (Baltimore, 1979).
2.
2 G.B. Shaw. The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism (New York. 1928), pp. 143-143. 189-189.
3.
3 Journal of a Lady of Quality (New Haven, 1923), p. 104-104.
4.
4 A notable pioneer in comparative plantation studies is the late Edgar T. Thompson. See his The Plantation.: an international bibliography (Boston, 1983) and the discussion of his life and work in Plantation Society (Vol. II, no. 3, May 1989), pp.219-58.
5.
5 Economic Change in Pre-Colonial Africa: Senegambia in the era of the slave trade (Madison, 1975).
6.
6 Twvo Jamaicas (New York, 1955).
7.
7 The Atlantic Slave Trade: A census (Madison, 1969).
8.
8 Cros-Cultural Trade in World History (New York, 1984).
9.
9 Jack Forbes, Black Africans and Native Americans (London and New York, 1988); Gary B. Mills, The Forgotten People (Baton Rouge, 1977); William Katz, Black Indians: a hidden heritage (New York, 1986).
10.
10 Capitalism and Slavery (Chapel Hill, 1944), pp. 30-50.
11.
11 Richard B. Sheridan. 'Africa and the Caribbean in the Atlantic slave trade'. American Historical Review (Vol. 77, no. 1, 1972), p.35-35.