Human rights and racial equality work Alongside his academic work, Palmer was also a prominent
human rights activist and was involved in a considerable amount of charity work in the community. He wrote a series of articles for the
Times Educational Supplement from 1969 to 1971 on ways to improve the education of children from ethnic minorities. and he contributed an article to
The Scotsman entitled "Stephen Lawrence analysis: Society is more mixed but racism has not gone away – we still have a long way to go" (5 January 2012). Palmer also authored a book on the history of slavery,
The Enlightenment Abolished: Citizens of Britishness (2007), and spoke out extensively against the slave trade. As an accepted world authority on slavery and the Atlantic slave trade, Toronto and the City of Edinburgh Councils have adopted his views rather than new research from
T. M. Devine. In 2007, the Bicentenary of the passage of the
Slave Trade Act 1807 by Parliament, which abolished the slave trade, Professor Geoff Palmer was named among the "
100 Great Black Britons", as well as on the 2020 updated list. He served as the Honorary President of Edinburgh and Lothians Regional Equality Council (
ELREC), an Edinburgh-based organisation that works to tackle discrimination and promote human rights and equality in the community, specifically with regard to the nine protected characteristics outlined in the
Equality Act 2010. Palmer spoke about the Ethnic Coding in
NHS Scotland at ELREC's 40th Annual General Meeting.
Presenter of television programme "Slavery and abolition" Palmer presented a special episode in the second series of the
Scottish Television produced ''People's History
. The programme features the story of James McCune Smith, and as part of it Palmer interviewed Stephen Mullen, the author of the book It wisnae us'', which centres on Glasgow and slavery.
Melville Monument and slavery During the
George Floyd protests, Palmer was a leading proponent of calls to reinterpret the
Melville Monument, a large column in
St Andrew Square, Edinburgh, dedicated to Scottish statesman
Henry Dundas, due to his support for "gradual
abolition", which delayed the
abolition of the slave trade by fifteen years. Noting that he did not support the removal of controversial statues "because [they are] part of black history", Palmer instead called on Scottish society to "take down...
racism". On 4 April 2021, Palmer appeared on an episode of the BBC's
Antiques Roadshow, presenting his antique collection of silver sugar bowls and tongs. On the programme, he described the significance of these items to slavery: "After the 200-year commemoration of the abolition of the slave trade, I decided to look at sugar, because it was one of the main reasons for slavery. I thought I would find some evidence of this and acquired these silver items. While slaves were working and dying, people... were consuming the sugar, in those bowls, and with those tongs. To me, those silver bowls tell us the sort of things we do in order to make money, and to have a lifestyle that we think we deserve." ==Awards and honours==