Population Control in the ‘‘Global North’’?: Canada’s Response to Indigenous Reproductive Rights and Neo-Eugenics

Abstract

Author's Abstract, Page 481:

"An historical analysis of reproductive politics in the Canadian North during the 1970s necessitates a careful reading of the local circumstances regarding feminism, sovereignty, language, colonialism, and access to health services, which differed regionally and culturally. These features were conditioned, however, by international discussions on family planning that fixated on the twinned concepts of unchecked population growth and poverty. Language from these debates crept into discussions about reproduction and birth control in northern Canada, producing the state’s logic that, despite low population density, the endemic poverty in the North necessitated aggressive family planning measures." (481).

Publication Information

Dyck, Erika, and Lux, Maureen. “Population Control in the ‘’Global North’’?: Canada’s Response to Indigenous Reproductive Rights and Neo-Eugenics.” Canadian Historical Review 97, no. 4 (December 2016): 481–512. doi:10.3138/chr.Dyck.

Author
Dyck, Erika
Lux, Maureen
Publication Date
2016
Primary Resource
Secondary
Resource Type
Documents
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