Jon at Posthegemony posts the final section of his conference paper on “Piracy, Nomadism, and the State,” [1] in which he notes that “privateers were particularly a feature of the sixteenth-century Caribbean, when private seamen such as Drake and Hawkins, though viewed as common criminals by the Spanish, in fact did the work of English state foreign policy more effectively and efficiently than the English navy itself was capable of doing.”
Caribbean: Pirate paper
· Written by Georgia Popplewell
Categories: Governance, History, Politics