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Essays on
Colonisation
and on the
disposal of
Convicts
Essay on the Colonisation:
especially
by convicts: particularly
applied the Settlements
in New S.Wales.
Inconveniences
II
I. Respecting the
Colonists
I
II - the Mother
Country
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Ends in vine
in forming the
establishment
6
1. Saving of expence.
1
21. Extension of
expence.
32. AUgmentation
of wealth 3
3.Exercise of navigation 7
4. Improvement
of Morals
5
5. Propagation
of Religion.
4
6. Introduction of
new instruments
of engagement -
new.Hemp.
—
Inconveniences 14
Expence of defence
in care
of I I
1 Expence of government
15
12 Expence of existing
allegiience
I2
33 Exercise of patronage
& influence.
44 Expence attending
the distance.
45 Difficulty of
good government
from the distance
I3
12 6 Future extension
of patronage
Law - Church -
Revenue - Officers
&c. I6
127 Extension of
Maritime Force
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Means of making
the most of
it
Objects of res-
Persons to be sent
out -
Mode of obtaining
proper persons.
Advertisement.
Field for experiments
in legislation.
Expectations of
more productions
1 - Mineral.
Ex.g. Plat
2. Vegetable
3. Animal.
For vegetable,
climates whose
plants would live
in our own are
preferable.
Vegetable products
not compostable
fresh.
Cheaper to bring
the Flax-plant
to a nearer country.
My beed
for where & when a
breach of trust-
compare with the
African family &
the though & bo .
scotch fishing
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The set of more
out - another
who think
Who the planner
of this scheme -
Will he stand
firm and avow
himself
Will he stand
examination
What talents
natural or acquir'd
for legislation - What
extent of views?-
What acquaintance
with
Natural philosophy,
the mistress
of economy
and of the arts?
Colonisation
involves legislation.
The only known
product that affords
assessibility of being
worth carriage is the
Flax-plant - & if
that the mode of
manufaction is
known only in N.
Zealand
200 Irish - were
not many of them
Catholics probably
most - where is
their instructional
comfort?
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Faciendae
1. No more men
than women.
2. Panopticon
a seminary
for the Colony.
3. The first
thing should have
been a minuteclose
survey of the
coasts & Rivers -
Cook's distant
survey not sufficient.
4. Royal Society
to choose naturalists
&c & give
in plans of settlement
4. Poachers &
and Poaching books
- as the Game
Laws do not extend
there.
5. Estimate should
have been made
out under every
head & under
every head a
comparison drawn
between the actual
expence & the estimate
M
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Identifier: | JB/107/113/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 107. |
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107 |
panopticon |
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113 |
convict colonies |
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002 |
essays on colonisation and on the disposal of convicts / ends in view / facienda / inconvenience / panopticon a seminary / introd |
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plan |
3 |
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recto |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::l munn [britannia with shield emblem]]] |
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benjamin constant |
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35104 |
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