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Description
With a new prologue by the author, this feminist classic is an important gateway into the controversial topic of population for students, activists, researchers and policymakers. It challenges the myth of overpopulation, uncovering the deeper roots of poverty, environmental degradation and gender inequalities. With vivid case studies, it explores how population control programs came to be promoted by powerful governments, foundations and international agencies as an instrument of Cold War development and security policy. Mainly targeting poor women, these programs were designed to drive down birth rates as rapidly and cheaply as possible, with coercion often a matter of course. In the war on population growth, birth control was deployed as a weapon, rather than as a tool of reproductive choice.

Threaded throughout Reproductive Rights and Wrongs is the story of how international women’s health activists fought to reform population control and promote a new agenda of sexual and reproductive health and rights for all people. While their efforts bore fruit, many obstacles remain. On one side is the anti-choice movement that wants to deny women access not only to abortion, but to most methods of contraception. On the other is a resurgent, well-funded population control lobby that often obscures its motives with the language of women’s empowerment. Despite declining birth rates worldwide – average global family size is now 2.5 children – overpopulation alarm is on the rise, tied now to the threats of climate change and terrorism. Reproductive Rights and Wrongs helps readers understand how these contemporary developments are rooted in the longer history and politics of population control. In the pages of this book a new generation of readers will find knowledge, argumentation and inspiration that will help in ongoing struggles to achieve reproductive rights and social, environmental and gender justice.
Author Bios

Betsy Hartmann writes nonfiction and fiction about important national and global challenges. Her forthcoming book The America Syndrome: Apocalypse, War and Our Call to Greatness reveals how end-times thinking profoundly influences American foreign policy, environmental politics and the persistence of injustice. Now in its third edition, Betsy’s feminist classic Reproductive Rights and Wrongs: The Global Politics of Population Control tackles the powerful myth of overpopulation and its negative consequences for women’s reproductive health and rights. She is also the co-author of A Quiet Violence: View from a Bangladesh Village and co-editor of the anthology Making Threats: Biofears and Environmental Anxieties. Her political thrillers The Truth About Fire and Deadly Election explore the threat the Far Right poses to American democracy. From 1988 until recently Betsy taught at Hampshire College where she directed the Population and Development Program. She is a well-known educator, commentator, and advocate on women’s rights, population, environment and security concerns. For more on Betsy, see www.BetsyHartmann.com.

More Info

Publication date: December 13, 2016

Table of Contents
  • Preface


  • PART ONE

  • THE REAL POPULATION PROBLEM
    1. Security and Survival
    2. The Malthusian Orthodoxy
    3. A Womb of One's Own
    4. The Plan Behind Family Planning
    5. The Indonesian "Success" and the Kenyan "Failure"

  • PART TWO

  • POPULATION CONTROL COMES OF AGE
    6. Birth of an Ideology
    7. The Population Establishment Today
    8. Building a "Consensus" for Cairo and Beyond
    9. China—"Gold Babies" and Disappearing Girls

  • PART THREE

  • CONTRACEPTIVE CONTROVERSIES
    10. Shaping Contraceptive Technology
    11. Hormonal Contraceptives and the IUD
    12. Bangladesh—Survival of the Richest
    13. Sterilization and Abortion
    14. Barrier Methods, Natural Family Planning, and Future Directions

  • PART FOUR

  • THE WAY FORWARD
    15. The Light at the End of the Demographic Tunnel
    16. The Population Framework: Inside or Outside?
    Appendix: Call for a New Approach

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