Today marks the International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade, and on this March 25, 2026, Ghana’s President John Mahama will be at the United Nations Headquarters in New York to support The UN General Assembly vote on a resolution designating the transatlantic African slave trade as “the gravest crime against humanity.” This important recognition sets the stage for structural reparations and structural transformation for Africa and the rest of the Global South. That is the next frontier of the struggle for justice.
If we want to understand how the modern world economy was built, we have to stop treating the trafficking and chattel enslavement of Africans as a tragic “labor system” sitting on the sidelines of industrialization. It was an engineered architecture of extraction, designed to do three things at once:
transfer people at a continental scale,
convert human beings into capital assets, and
organize global trade and production around coerced commodity frontiers.






