In: Operations Management
The encomienda system used by the Spaniards to enslave the indigenous peoples of the New World, especially as practiced in Mexico, became controversial in Spain. Describe the encomienda system and the arguments used for and against it.
The encomienda system is a Spanish work system that rewards
winners with the labor of a number of non-Christian groups. In
theory, workers benefited from the victors, whose main advantage
was Catholicism. Encomienda was first created in Spain after the
conquest of the Moorish territory of Christianity (known as
Christine Dissociation) and used on a large scale during the
Spanish colonization of the United States and the Spanish
Philippines. The conquered peoples were regarded as the
machinations of the Spanish monarch. The delivery of an encomienda
crown to a specific person. In the era of the conquest of the
nineteenth century, grants were considered to be exclusive to the
work of specific groups of indigenous peoples who were forever
occupied by grant holder
The Encomiendas evolved from their original Iberian form to the
"urban" form of slavery. During the meeting, the Spanish crown
provided a number of local people from a specific community, but
did not determine what people in the community would need to
provide for their work. Aboriginal leaders are tasked with
gathering valuable respect and effort. For their part, the
recipients were to ensure that the natives of the community
received instruction in the Christian and Spanish beliefs and to
protect them from warring tribes or pirates. They had to suppress
the rebellion against Spain and maintain the infrastructure. In
exchange, locals will pay taxes in the form of metals, corn, wheat,
pork or other agricultural products.