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Difference between revisions of "slavery"

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# [[millitary recrutement]], forcing a [[person]] to serve in [[military]].
 
# [[millitary recrutement]], forcing a [[person]] to serve in [[military]].
 
# [[sex slavery]], forcing a person to perform [[sex]] acts. See also [[rape]] and [[prostitution]].
 
# [[sex slavery]], forcing a person to perform [[sex]] acts. See also [[rape]] and [[prostitution]].
 
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# slaving, which can mean performing hard tasks (but also [[wage slavery|being bossed around by the employer]]).
Misuses of the word also include:
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# submissiveness, specifically in [[S&M]].
# slaving, which can mean performing hard tasks (but also [[wage slavery|being bossed around by the employer]])
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# [[slave (computing)|slave drive or computer]] in [[computing]] reffers to the [[disk drive|drive]] or [[computer]] which is either secondary to or responds to the commands of the [[master (computing)|master]].
  
 
=={{ll|Etymology}}==
 
=={{ll|Etymology}}==

Revision as of 09:54, 28 June 2006

The 1926 Slavery Convention described slavery as “...the status or condition of a person over whom any or all of the powers attaching to the right of ownership are exercised...” Today slavery is defined in the broader sence of the word to mean any condition when a person is unfree.

There are multiple types of slavery:

  1. chattel slavery, legalized or pseudolegalazed ownership of another human.
  2. wage slavery, condition when the worker cannot quit the job out of the fear of starvation.
  3. serfdom, condition when the peasant doesn't control the land on which one grows food.
  4. prison, taking away the freedom as the punishment for the crime.
  5. millitary recrutement, forcing a person to serve in military.
  6. sex slavery, forcing a person to perform sex acts. See also rape and prostitution.
  7. slaving, which can mean performing hard tasks (but also being bossed around by the employer).
  8. submissiveness, specifically in S&M.
  9. slave drive or computer in computing reffers to the drive or computer which is either secondary to or responds to the commands of the master.

Etymology

The word “slave” comes from Latin sclavus relating to the Slavic people who were the majority of the slaves during the time the word was coined.

See also

External link