The Demographic Research in Lusophone Africa

Author(s):  
Carlos Arnaldo ◽  
Rogers Hansine ◽  
Nelson C. Zavale
Keyword(s):  
1985 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. 723
Author(s):  
A. Lewis Rhodes ◽  
Henk ter Heide ◽  
Frans J. Willekens

Author(s):  
Nina Cesare ◽  
Tyler McCormick ◽  
Emma S. Spiro ◽  
Emilio Zagheni
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Emily Klancher Merchant

Chapter 2 documents the establishment of demography, the social science of human population dynamics, in the United States during the 1930s. It contends that this interdisciplinary field was able to build an institutional structure because of support from eugenicist Frederick Osborn, who saw in demography an ally for the creation of a postracial democratic version of eugenics. Osborn’s new brand of eugenics emphasized birth control rather than sterilization and worked through the private sector rather than the public sector. He fused birth control advocacy with eugenics in a strategy he termed “family planning,” which signaled reproductive autonomy in the context of social control. Osborn secured patronage for demography from the Milbank Memorial Fund and the Carnegie Corporation, and an audience for demographic research in the New Deal welfare state. He leveraged his influence to focus demography’s research program on producing support for his family planning–based eugenic project.


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