Consular Recognition, Partial Neutrality, and the Making of Atlantic Diplomacy, 1778–1825
In: Diplomatic history, Band 46, Heft 1, S. 144-172
ISSN: 1467-7709
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In: Diplomatic history, Band 46, Heft 1, S. 144-172
ISSN: 1467-7709
In: Journal of policy history: JPH, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 401-428
ISSN: 1528-4190
AbstractAs revolutions swept across Central and South America in the 1820s and 1830s, Andrew Jackson's administration undertook a landmark reform that transformed the US foreign policy apparatus into the nation's first global bureaucracy. With the introduction of Edward Livingston's 1833 consular reform bill to Congress, the nation embarked on a long path toward the modernization of its consular service in line with the powers of Europe and the new American republics. Despite the popularity of Livingston's plan to turn a dated US consular service comprised of mercantile elites into a salaried professional bureaucracy, the Jacksonian consular reform dragged on for more than two decades before the passing of a consular bill in 1856. Contrary to Weberian models positing a straightforward path toward bureaucratization, the trajectory of Jacksonian consular reform demonstrates the power of mercantile elites to resist central government regulation just as much as it highlights how petty partisans—the protégé consuls appointed via the Jacksonian "spoils system"—powerfully shaped government policy to achieve personal advantages. In the constant tug-of-war between merchant-consuls and Jacksonian protégés, both groups mobilized competing visions of the "national character" in their correspondence with the Department of State and in the national press. Ultimately, the Jacksonian reform vision of an egalitarian and loyal consular officialdom prevailed over the old mercantile model of consulship as a promoter of national prestige and commercial expertise, but only after protégé consuls successfully exploited merchant-consuls' perceived inability to compete with the salaried European officials across the sister-republics of the southwestern hemisphere.
In: Journal of global slavery, Band 5, Heft 3, S. 291-321
ISSN: 2405-836X
Abstract
This article argues that Iberian consulates in the United States identified the emergence of a "privateering archipelago," a new revolutionary interimperial legal/economic regime stretching from Rhode Island to the greater Caribbean in the post-Napoleonic decade. Spanish consuls' successful navigation of the privateering archipelago enabled them to expand the power of Cuban slavers into the southern U.S. Spanish consuls' confrontation with privateers became a driving force in the revival of the slave trade after its international condemnation at the Congress of Vienna (1815). Even though there were many ways in which Spanish consulates used the entanglement between privateering and slaving to strengthen the colonial hold on slavery, it was by means of whitening passports that they sought to institutionalize their power in the privateering archipelago. Intended to disenfranchise free gente de color and to re-commodify African slaves, the policy of whitening passports ended up marginalizing mariners and alienating them from consuls.