We a good story
Quick delivery in the UK

The Gospel of Family Planning

The Gospel of Family PlanningBy Nicole C. Bourbonnais
About The Gospel of Family Planning

"Over the course of the twentieth century, family planning took the world by storm. Starting in the 1930s, activists, international aid organizations, and government agencies embraced the notion that lowering birth rates were the solution to everything from hunger to underdevelopment and environmental degradation. Along the way, historian Nicole Bourbonnais argues, family planning played a role in several major ideological struggles, becoming entangled with feminism, nationalism, socialism, racial inequality, decolonization, and the Cold War. In The Gospel of Family Planning, Bourbonnais focuses on the doctors, social workers, nurses, consultants, church groups, and volunteers who gave force to the movement, as well as the many ordinary people affected by it. Using both microhistories and collective biographies, she shows how the practice of population control was instituted at an everyday scale and unpacks vexed questions surrounding issues of contraception and sterilization across varied cultural contexts. In so doing, she tracks how the debate over family planning shifted from one of population control to one about reproductive rights and justice. The book ultimately shows how family size became a matter of state interest and how, when, and why people became concerned with the size of other people's families, within their own countries as well as on the other side of the world"--

Show more
  • Language:
  • English
  • ISBN:
  • 9780226840802
  • Binding:
  • Paperback
  • Pages:
  • 272
  • Published:
  • May 5, 2025
  • Dimensions:
  • 152x229x20 mm.
  • Weight:
  • 410 g.
Delivery: 3-5 businessdays after publication
Expected delivery: May 14, 2025

Description of The Gospel of Family Planning

"Over the course of the twentieth century, family planning took the world by storm. Starting in the 1930s, activists, international aid organizations, and government agencies embraced the notion that lowering birth rates were the solution to everything from hunger to underdevelopment and environmental degradation. Along the way, historian Nicole Bourbonnais argues, family planning played a role in several major ideological struggles, becoming entangled with feminism, nationalism, socialism, racial inequality, decolonization, and the Cold War. In The Gospel of Family Planning, Bourbonnais focuses on the doctors, social workers, nurses, consultants, church groups, and volunteers who gave force to the movement, as well as the many ordinary people affected by it. Using both microhistories and collective biographies, she shows how the practice of population control was instituted at an everyday scale and unpacks vexed questions surrounding issues of contraception and sterilization across varied cultural contexts. In so doing, she tracks how the debate over family planning shifted from one of population control to one about reproductive rights and justice. The book ultimately shows how family size became a matter of state interest and how, when, and why people became concerned with the size of other people's families, within their own countries as well as on the other side of the world"--

User ratings of The Gospel of Family Planning



Find similar books
The book The Gospel of Family Planning can be found in the following categories:

Join thousands of book lovers

Sign up to our newsletter and receive discounts and inspiration for your next reading experience.