This study maps the invention, circulation and regulation of the population crisis from 1945 to 1995. I conceptualize the population crisis as a complex field of practical reasoning occupied by different elements--human technologies, discourse strategies, institutions, and populations. The primary theoretical concern of this project is to describe how the population crisis emerged as a particular "governmental technology" dedicated to policing reproductive behaviors. As a cultural history, this study will analyze how the population crisis, as a policy formation, problematized and publicized the habits, morals and manners of specific populations in order to regulate population growth. This study tracks both an international and a national tr...
To Malthus, rapid human population growth—so evident in 18th Century Europe—was obviously unsustaina...
Going by ideological debates concerning (un)justifiable state intervention, protection of individ...
T.R. Malthus' "An Essay on the Principle of Population" (1798) was one of the first systematic studi...
This study maps the invention, circulation and regulation of the population crisis from 1945 to 1995...
The article explores the population policies of the administration of U.S. President Richard M. Nixo...
Modernity does not possess a monopoly on mass incarceration, population fears, forced migration, fam...
abstract: The idea that population growth presents a major threat to global stability has existed ev...
No discussion of population can being and end with the examination of historical data, perhaps combi...
The history of the United States Government\u27s international population policy is examined accordi...
Overpopulation caught the attention of scientists, popular science authors, and science fiction crea...
In the last two decades of the nineteenth century, new teachings on Malthusianism emerged. These wer...
Population control is diabolical. It is wily, ahistorical and better to give than to receive. It is...
The twentieth century was an exceptional period in the history of world population: it grew faster t...
The Malthusian theory of population holds that at some point in the future, with generational turnov...
In the period before the onset of demographic transition, when fertility rates were positively assoc...
To Malthus, rapid human population growth—so evident in 18th Century Europe—was obviously unsustaina...
Going by ideological debates concerning (un)justifiable state intervention, protection of individ...
T.R. Malthus' "An Essay on the Principle of Population" (1798) was one of the first systematic studi...
This study maps the invention, circulation and regulation of the population crisis from 1945 to 1995...
The article explores the population policies of the administration of U.S. President Richard M. Nixo...
Modernity does not possess a monopoly on mass incarceration, population fears, forced migration, fam...
abstract: The idea that population growth presents a major threat to global stability has existed ev...
No discussion of population can being and end with the examination of historical data, perhaps combi...
The history of the United States Government\u27s international population policy is examined accordi...
Overpopulation caught the attention of scientists, popular science authors, and science fiction crea...
In the last two decades of the nineteenth century, new teachings on Malthusianism emerged. These wer...
Population control is diabolical. It is wily, ahistorical and better to give than to receive. It is...
The twentieth century was an exceptional period in the history of world population: it grew faster t...
The Malthusian theory of population holds that at some point in the future, with generational turnov...
In the period before the onset of demographic transition, when fertility rates were positively assoc...
To Malthus, rapid human population growth—so evident in 18th Century Europe—was obviously unsustaina...
Going by ideological debates concerning (un)justifiable state intervention, protection of individ...
T.R. Malthus' "An Essay on the Principle of Population" (1798) was one of the first systematic studi...