The paper focuses on accounting for slave workers during one of the most morally culpable periods in Western civilization and is concerned with issues central to labor – modes of production, labor control, and labor productivity. It incorporates secondary sources and examination of records from over 150 different US and BWI plantations to identify contextual factors that motivated planters to organize their workforce in a particular way. The paper specifically describes the ganging and tasking methods of extracting surplus value and indicates how these methods fit within three common paradigmatic interpretations of accounting history – labor process, power/knowledge/discipline, and economic rationalism. In summary, ganging exemplified a pre‐modern approach to organizing labor in which planters relied primarily on physical power to compel work effort and increase output. Tasking incorporated individual work rates and included more sophisticated practices of surveillance, measurement, normalization, and socialization. Tasking became economically rational by responding to changing market conditions and by incorporating procedures and incentives to spur greater productivity. Therefore, tasking may be perceived as a thematic precursor to accounting‐based disciplinary controls like standard costing and a transitionary element from pre‐modern to modern control systems.
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1 December 2004
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Conceptual Paper|
December 01 2004
Theoretical perspectives on accounting for labor on slave plantations of the USA and British West Indies
Thomas N. Tyson;
Thomas N. Tyson
Department of Accounting, St John Fisher College, Rochester, New York, USA
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Richard K. Fleischman;
Richard K. Fleischman
Department of Accountancy, John Carroll University, University Heights, Ohio, USA
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David Oldroyd
David Oldroyd
University of Newcastle Business School, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-4205
Print ISSN: 1368-0668
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2004
Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal (2004) 17 (5): 758–778.
Citation
Tyson TN, Fleischman RK, Oldroyd D (2004), "Theoretical perspectives on accounting for labor on slave plantations of the USA and British West Indies". Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol. 17 No. 5 pp. 758–778, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09513570410567809
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