The project was conducted through three work packages: 1) analysis of contemporary works on “natural law”, the predominant theory of law and politics, and “Statistics”, that is, empirical political science. 2) collection and analysis of published and archival sources relating to the colonial reform projects. 3) a synthetic analysis of how these amounted to a conceptualisation and construction of Denmark as a colonial state.
Work package 1 analysed Danish works of theoretical and empirical political science from the years 1784-1897, yielding several important results. First, surveying the predominant “statistical” works provided an overview of the body of knowledge (printed and manuscript works) on the Danish colonies available to contemporary readers about. Second, analysis of these works demonstrated that the “Danish states” were indeed conceptualised as a coherent polity comprising also the colonies in the Caribbean, West Africa, Asia, and the Arctic. The prominent empirical works of political science also noted the significance of contemporary colonial reforms and published information and contemporary sources on these, particularly relating to the endeavours to reform slavery. Third, these endeavours were explicitly cast in natural jurisprudential discourse, and a further outcome was to show how Danish works of natural law contained extensive discussions of slavery.
Building on these findings, work package 2 analysed in detail the colonial reform projects based, first, on contemporary published sources and, second, on targeted studies of archival sources from the reform projects. This further detailed the use of common discourses and aims in several of the reform projects. This also showed that the reform projects for the Danish colonies in the Caribbean and West Africa were carried out with significantly greater government support and with greater success. WP2 here resulted in in a detailed analysis of the discourses informing two central colonial reform projects based on sources from Finance Minister Ernst von Schimmelmann’s extensive private and professional archives: the abolition of the slave trade and the proposed alternative of plantation colonies in West Africa. Both projects sought to analyse the feasibility and desirability of reform based on a combination of empirical knowledge drawn from contemporary colonial reports and published works analysed and evaluated using natural jurisprudence as a normative framework.
WP3 conducted a synthetic analysis of findings from WPs 1 and 2. This showed that the reform projects were formulated in similar natural jurisprudential discourses and with similar aims, notably a concern with reforming or abolishing slavery and despotism, as well as promoting free trade, formulated using the discourse of natural law, as well as significant overlap and connections between historical actors involved. Particularly in the case of the Caribbean and West African colonies, Denmark was depicted as a leading example to “humanity” of how justice and utility could be combined to the benefit of both Europeans and indigenous people. These reforms were aimed at deepening the integration between Denmark and the colonies in political, legal, and moral terms as a single polity.
Project results were disseminated in eight papers presented at seminars, workshops, and conferences, as well as in the organisation of a conference and workshop. The project’s findings have also resulted in manuscripts for peer-reviewed forthcoming publications: 1 journal article and 3 chapters in edited volumes. In addition, the project findings have informed the formulation of new research projects.