Description
Peopling for Profit in Imperial Brazil investigates the intricate relationship between directed migration policies and commercial enterprise during the nineteenth century. José Juan Pérez Meléndez analyzes how Brazilian elites and European entrepreneurs collaborated to attract and settle European immigrants, transforming this demographic shift into a lucrative business model.
The book examines the mechanisms through which colonization schemes were designed, promoted, and implemented, revealing the economic interests that drove immigration policy. Pérez Meléndez demonstrates how these migrations fundamentally altered Brazilian society, labor markets, and territorial development while generating substantial profits for colonization companies and allied interests.
As part of the Cambridge Latin American Studies series, this volume contributes significant insights into Brazilian history, economic development, and the complex interplay between state policy, private enterprise, and migration patterns in the nineteenth-century Americas.







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