A statue named "Chains," by French artist Driss Sans-Arcidet, honoring the memory of the abolition of slavery, is photographed in a park in Paris, Wednesday, May 27, 2026, as France's National Assembly examines a bill to formally repeal the Code Noir, or Black Code, the 17th-century royal edict that governed slavery in French colonies and treated enslaved people as property.
France's parliament is moving to repeal a slavery law called Code Noir that has remained quietly in place for nearly two centuries after slavery was abolished. French lawmakers will likely formally eliminate Code Noir or Black Code in a vote on Thursday. The colonial-era law that classified people as property stayed quietly in place. That realization has upset many. Especially those who live in French overseas departments. Most of their residents are descended from the enslaved.