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Sugar Plantations and the Codification of Racist Attitudes
The British colonists in Barbados in 1661 wrote the Act for the Governing of Negroes, a document that described Africans as having fewer rights than animals, not to be treated as humans but as a different category from Europeans. This act gave legitimacy to the mistreatment of Africans and solidified racism into law. The sugar plantations in the Caribbean, particularly in Barbados, played a critical role in establishing modern racism as the law of the land among English colonies by creating a false belief that Africans were not human.