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- Chapter 0_Introduction
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- Chapter 01
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- Making the Company work
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- Summary_in Dutch
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Lobbying in Company: Mechanisms of political decision-making and economic interests in the history of Dutch Brazil, 1621-1656
This thesis argues that lobbying was an important phenomenon in the seventeenth-century and that it had far-reaching influence on the course of history. Seventeenth-century lobbying took the form of petitions, personal relations, and pressure through public opinion. The importance of lobbying means that people (including ordinary people) could be more important than large organizations such as the WIC for, for example, the colonial empire. An example of successful lobby includes the introduction of regulations governing the storage of sugar during the night. This quality amelioration was an initiative of the sugar producers and not of the Company. Another example is the successful lobby by the Brazilian inhabitants to not only employ enslaved Africans, but to also force the indigenous population into slave labor on the sugar plantations. Moreover, within the Dutch Republic people were forced to tone down their reports or to alter their opinion because of 'political sensitivities'. It is interesting that lobbying alliances transcended traditional boundaries in society. This means that Jews lobbied with Christians, women with men, soldiers with captains, French people with Scotts and Hollanders, and inhabitants of The Hague together with citizens in Middelburg, Leiden, and Dordrecht.
In other words, people made a difference.
Show less- All authors
- Tol, J.J.S. van den
- Supervisor
- Antunes, C.A.P.; Klooster, W.
- Committee
- Amann, E; De Campos Françozo, M.; Groesen, M. van; Janssen, G.H.; Schuurman, A.J.A.M.; Vermeesch, G.
- Qualification
- Doctor (dr.)
- Awarding Institution
- Institute for History, Humanities, Leiden University
- Date
- 2018-03-20