I'm interviewing historian of abolitionism Christopher Brown. What should I ask him?

By Robert_Wiblin @ 2022-12-12T15:17 (+30)

This week I'm interviewing Christopher Brown — history professor at Columbia University — about the movement for abolition.

How did it happen? Why did it take off where and when it did? What were the key events that helped it build momentum? Was it inevitable, or historically contingent?

What should I ask him?

Even if you haven't read his work, Professor Brown is quoted a number of times in the relevant chapters or MacAskill's 'What We Owe The Future'.

Some other sources for his views include:


David van Beveren @ 2022-12-12T17:23 (+7)

Super cool! Here's a few questions that might be nice to ask:

Will keep my eye out for the next 80,000 Hours Podcast, thanks!

lukeprog @ 2022-12-12T17:41 (+6)

How many independent or semi-independent abolitionist movements were there around the world during the period of global abolition, vs. one big one that started with Quakers+Britain and then was spread around the world primarily by Europeans? (E.g. see footnote 82 here.)

lukeprog @ 2022-12-31T18:46 (+4)

What's his guess about how "% of humans enslaved (globally)" evolved over time? See e.g. my discussion here.

Alex_Ant @ 2022-12-13T07:24 (+4)

Brilliant! I see this conversation as an opportunity for great insights into the practical unfolding of moral circle expansion, the evolution/structure of social movements as a whole, and the benefits/limitations of using historical analysis to understand and predict the behavior of complex social systems.