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Internationalism and Health

Internationalism and Health. Lecture:. Biopower and Population Control. Aaron Pascal Mauck MA, PhD. 3/7/2013. DATE. LECTURER. Biopower The Transformation of Eugenics Demographic Belligerence Family Planning. Biopower. “An explosion of numerous and

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Internationalism and Health

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  1. Internationalism and Health Lecture: Biopower and Population Control Aaron Pascal Mauck MA, PhD 3/7/2013 DATE LECTURER

  2. Biopower • The Transformation of Eugenics • Demographic Belligerence • Family Planning

  3. Biopower “An explosion of numerous and diverse techniques for achieving the subjugations of bodies and the control of populations” -- History of Sexuality “The set of mechanisms through which the basic biological features of the human species became the object of a political strategy.” -- “Security, Territory, Population Biopower linked to the rise of modern states and the regulation of population for The achievement of specific state ends. Exemplified by phenomena such as disciplinary institutions like modern schools and prisons, statistical and demographic research, and human sciences like economics and sociology. Represents a shift in the exercise of power away from dramatic displays of Authority exercised on individual bodies, towards the control of bodies en masse.

  4. Biopower Eugenics and Birth Control begin as Social Movements rather than State projects, but both attempted to Recruit states for the achievements Of their ends. Collaboration with states became the Norm for both movements, accompanied By several policy proposals aimed At population management National Origins Act of 1924: Restricted limited the annual number of immigrants who could be admitted from any country to 2% of the number of people from that country who were already living in the United States in 1890 Greatest impact of the Act felt on Southern and Eastern European populations widely considered dysgenic in racially-inflected eugenics literature Albert Johnson (Chair of the House Immigration Committee): Control of Immigration “more and more a biological problem.”

  5. Biopower Advocates of negative eugenics promoted national & state policies of selective sterilization To control reproduction. Buck v. Bell 1927: “It is better for all the world, if instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime, or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind. The principle that sustains compulsory vaccination is broad enough to cover cutting fallopian tubes.” O.W. Holmes During the thirties, similar compulsory sterilization laws passed in Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden, Mexico, and of course, Germany.

  6. The Transformation of Eugenics By the thirties, Eugenicists generally recognize the limitations of a negative eugenics program based on sterilization alone Edward East: “The Eugenicists have seldom Gone farther than to suggest that the whole Current of society can be changed by interfering With the two little rills which flow from either side [the most and least fit].” Research on recessive Genes underscored the limits of sterilization as An effective eugenic instrument. Eugenic activities in Nazi Germany challenge the more radical strains of Negative eugenics centered on race and disability, gradually replacing The eugenic discourse centered on racial populations with one centered On other population divisions (resources, health), and the advocacy Of sterilization with advocacy of access to birth control. By the thirties, a new movement of “reform eugenics” emerged, which still Held that certain socioeconomic or racial groups possessed desirable traits, But stressed the potential to nurture positive traits at all social levels.

  7. Demographic Belligerence In the wake of the WWI, traditional ethnic and class divisions increasingly became reframed as biological divisions. Managing populations through positive measures (pronatalism) or negative measures (birth control) thus came to be seen as a means of resolving social problems. Hitler: conquest, depopulation, and resettlement of EasternEurope constituted the “planned control of population movements” to restore the quality of the Aryan Race . Germany implements pronatalist policies in occupied Scandinavian countries (immediate shutdown of birth Control clinics and arrest of their staff), and antinatalist Policies in occupied Slavic countries (restrictions on marriage)

  8. Demographic Belligerence The struggle to control the demographic Future did not just take place between Belligerent nations but was also considered In global terms Global expressions of demographic belligerence had historically concerned relations between the white race and other races, often with the suggestion that whites were threatened with extinction Lothrop Stoddard Lothrop Stoddard’s 1920 The Rising Tide of Color argued that colonial efforts to reduce famine and disease in nonwhite populations had resulted in “overcrowded colored homelands” out of which a “surplus of colored men” would spring. Stoddard thus argued for the isolation of other races like Bacterial invasions… limiting the area and amount of their food supply.”

  9. Demographic Belligerence By the thirties, global representations of demographic belligerence in terms of race begin to diminish, to be replaced by representations cutting across racial lines. Racial populations thus come to be seen in more complex terms. Complex representations of racialized global populations emerged in response to embarrassment over Nazi race rhetoric, The embrace of population control efforts in nations like India and Japan, and the decline in popularity of traditional eugenic thinking about race. Population control increasingly becomes reframed in terms of controlling the growth of specific populations within nations rather than the overall population of particular nations. Efforts are often focused on populations with perceived Limited resource and large family size. As traditional eugenic justifications for population control begin to fall out of favor, these are replaced by justifications based on the detrimental health effects on children caused by poverty and inadequate nutrition

  10. Demographic Belligerence • India represented a strong test for • The global population control • Movement: • Rapid population growth (death • rate dropped 25% between • 1920 &1920) • International concern with the • political status of Indian women • Increasing investment in public • health and nationalization of • control over public health • Lack of religious opposition to • large-scale use of birth control In India, Sanger aligned herself with local birth control advocates in favor of new Governmental measures, but these were Impeded by political and class tensions Ultimately, Sanger’s attempts to create A network of birth control clinics failed due to the limits of technology/infrastructure, and local allies abandoned her cause

  11. Family Planning Family Planning emerged at the intersection of the reform eugenics and birth control movements, but is framed less as a racial, geopolitical, or rights problem, than as a problem of social planning The Swedish sociologists Gunnar & Alva Myrdal developed The most influential model, linking a comprehensive program Of birth control to ensure no unwanted births, with a Comprehensive system of pregnancy and early childhood Support to encourage pregnancy for those interested in Having children This model reflected concerns about slowing population Growth in Sweden and opposition to immigration as an Acceptable solution to this problem Family planning particularly effective because it combined An emphasis on individual preference with a system of social Engineering designed to shape those preferences Gunner & Alva Myrdal

  12. Family Planning Increasing public health recognition of the adverse health effects of poverty in children spurred the Family planning movement and the entrenchment Of social welfare as a basic state function in Nations like Britain and the US. Emphasis on access To birth control and Social Support for families garners A widespread political coalition. C.P. Blacker Unlike earlier birth control and eugenic efforts, family planning garners the tacit support of the Catholic Church, which is buoyed by the movement’s emphasis on free choice, and comes to (grudgingly) accept the rhythm method as a viable birth control option, and is buoyed Frederick Osborne

  13. Summary The period between the First and Second World Wars witnessed the rise of A new movement of population management linked to perceived changes In life expectancy and increasing emphasis on pregnancy and childhood as important life stages with long-term and cross-generational effects Various strands related to the birth control and eugenics movements gradually Cohered into the movement for family planning, which linked free choice of Pregnancy with large scale efforts of social engineering and support Family planning linked the public health interest in childhood with recent efforts To enlarge the welfare state. Both processes were rooted to some degree in The socioeconomic conditions found in the Great Depression Following World War II any explicit promotion of eugenics became politically Unacceptable, but the principles underlying family planning became increasingly Popular, and gradually spread to the Global South

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