Compensated emancipation
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| Part of a series on Slavery |
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History · Antiquity |
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Gulag · Serfdom · Unfree labour · Debt bondage · Indentured servant · List of slaves · Legal status |
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Compensated emancipation was a method of ending slavery in countries where slavery was legal. This involved the person who was recognized as the owner of a slave being paid for releasing the slave. This typically was part of an act that outlawed slavery outright or established a scheme whereby slavery would eventually be phased out.
Nearly all countries that eliminated slavery did so through some form of compensated emancipation. Although most slavery in the United States was abolished during the American Civil War, rather than through compensated emancipation, it did occur in Washington, DC. On April 16, 1862, President Lincoln signed a law prohibiting slavery in the District of Columbia. Slave owners were forced to free their slaves, but were paid an average of about $300 for each slave by the government. Washington, DC was the only place in the United States where compensated emancipation took place.
[edit] Nations and empires that ended slavery through compensated emancipation
- Argentina
- Bolivia
- British Empire
- Chile
- Colombia
- Danish colonies
- Ecuador
- French colonies
- Mexico and Central America
- Peru
- Spanish Empire
- Uruguay
- Venezuela
- United States (Washington, DC only)

