- Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population
The essence of Matthew Connelly’s impressive study is captured in a table (page 374) that shows that, in the latter half of the twentieth century, fertility declined as dramatically in countries like Brazil and Turkey which did little to control population as it did in India and China which had launched massive campaigns to impose forcibly restrictions on reproduction. The “fatal misconception” of the western population planners who cheered on such crusades that ran rough shod over human rights was both to believe that they knew what was best for other people and to assume that they had the means to impose their views on the world. What was the source of such hubris? To understand the rise and fall of the population control empire, Connelly argues, one must begin by appreciating the emergence in the late nineteenth century of a world economy. At home Malthusians worried about the over-breeding of the lower classes while eugenicists bewailed the decline of the fertility of the “fit.” Abroad white western states expanded their powers, but saw themselves increasingly threatened by foreign masses who, the population experts insisted, could not be left to mindlessly reproduce.
Eugenics being too obviously a tool of the western world, the birth control movement under the leadership of Margaret Sanger assumed the task of launching population control as a world wide crusade. Sanger was the inspiration of the World Population conference of 1927 which, according to Connelly, marked the stage at which eminent demographers and scientists began to take an international view of population. Western commentators came to regard high fertility in the third world as a disease. In reality by 1930 Asia’s share of world population had dropped to its lowest level in history. Nevertheless it was declared to have a “population problem” by those who were in effect launching yet another chapter in the history of imperialism.
Western fears were further heightened when it was realized that even the Second World War had not blunted the surge in world population growth. Propagandists reversed the old notion that modernization would lead to population control; now the idea was increasingly expressed that only if poor countries controlled their population could they modernize. These new views were voiced by what Connelly calls the “population establishment” consisting of such men as [End Page 212] John D. Rockefeller, and organizations like the Population Council, the Ford Foundation, and the International Planned Parenthood Federation. India became their chief testing ground for a variety of technological fixes. If its population growth were not curbed, the story went, the rising expectations of its masses could become explosive. By 1963 the United States government was supporting this family planning “war” on high fertility in which “casualties”—including septic abortions, ectopic pregnancies, and life-threatening medical complications—were accepted. The excesses peaked with the Indira Ghandi’s sterilization camps in 1976. China’s one-child policy of the early 1980s entailed similar restrictions on the right to reproduce.
Well before the publicizing of such naked attempts at social engineering, opposition to the population controllers was being expressed. The Vatican, of course, repudiated all artificial means of fertility control, but Connolly traces back to the 1960s the emergence of feminism, the new understanding of the history of eugenics, and the appreciation of the Holocaust, as leading progressives to expose the racism and classism of population control. At the 1974 World Population Conference in Bucharest feminists like Germaine Greer and Betty Friedan protested that women’s voices were not being heard. In Connolly’s view the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development held at Cairo, where women won the delegates’ repudiation of coercive family planning and the acknowledgment of women’s right to choose, spelled the demise of the population control movement.
Though his book is more an administrative than a social history, Connelly has produced an important study that anyone interested in the history of reproduction will want to peruse. But readers expecting to find within its covers...