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Product Description Belize, formerly British Honduras, had a different beginning from most other British Caribbean colonies and was not dependent on sugar production but on the exploitation of the forests for timber. Unlike most books on Belize, this study explores in some detail the early Spanish attempts to colonize the area called Belize today and identifies many of the problems Spain encountered. Campbell persuasively posits that Belizean history can be pushed much further back from the traditional starting point of either the mid-seventeenth or early eighteenth century. The book provides a compelling thesis on the alliance between the British logwood cutters (the Baymen) and the Miskito Indians who together formed the major counterbalance to Spain’s power. The work also explores how social relations under forestry slavery were marked by less outward resistance and violence than that which obtained under the British sugar/slave economies of the region. Review “This work should appeal to scholars in the fields of Central American/Belizean history, Mexican history, Caribbean history, and studies on slavery and slave societies.” ―Franklin W. Knight, Leonard and Helen R. Stulman Professor of History, Johns Hopkins University About the Author Mavis C. Campbell is Emerita Professor of History, Amherst College. She is the author of several books and articles, including The Dynamics of Change in a Slave Society: A Sociopolitical History of the Free Coloreds of Jamaica, 1800–1865; The Maroons of Jamaica, 1655–1796: A History of Resistance, Collaboration and Betrayal; Nova Scotia and the Fighting Maroons: A Documentary History; and Back to Africa: George Ross and the Maroons from Nova Scotia to Sierra Leone.