This article re-interprets the connection between American 'mainline' eugenicists and German 'race hygienist' through the prism of the German Sterilization Law of 1933; it shows the 'normality' of this relationship, and its importance for the slow demise of eugenics after 1945
The question, or rather, the problem of sterilization of the unfit has been very forcibly carried in...
Contemporary concerns with technologies like CRISPR and the proliferation of state laws restricting ...
This essay uses issues of the Eugenics Quarterly from 1929 to examine the ways in which the eugenics...
During the 1910s-1930s eugenics movement, communications zipped between the German and American euge...
Mixed-race African German and Vietnamese German children were born around 1921, when troops drawn fr...
Eugenics is not a nineteenth-century invention. You can talk about it since the appearance of the fi...
Introducing a special issue of the journal, the article summarizes the half-century long debate on e...
The accepted version of the history of eugenics - put forward by Kevles, Allen and Barkan amongst ot...
The article describes a troubled history of eugenics in the US, from its beginnings at the end of th...
The relationship between the British and Nazi eugenics movements has been underexamined, largely bec...
In the late 1990s, a heated debate developed in Sweden around forced sterilization between 1935 and ...
In the first decades of the 20th century, broad recognition of Francis Galton’s eugenics resulted in...
Eve Eiler was born in Fort Wayne. She enjoys World War II, U.S. and Atlantic History. She plans to c...
physicians participated in state-authorized eugenic steril-ization programs in an attempt to prevent...
The thesis "American Eugenics and Its Impact on Nazi Germany" is a study about influence of the Amer...
The question, or rather, the problem of sterilization of the unfit has been very forcibly carried in...
Contemporary concerns with technologies like CRISPR and the proliferation of state laws restricting ...
This essay uses issues of the Eugenics Quarterly from 1929 to examine the ways in which the eugenics...
During the 1910s-1930s eugenics movement, communications zipped between the German and American euge...
Mixed-race African German and Vietnamese German children were born around 1921, when troops drawn fr...
Eugenics is not a nineteenth-century invention. You can talk about it since the appearance of the fi...
Introducing a special issue of the journal, the article summarizes the half-century long debate on e...
The accepted version of the history of eugenics - put forward by Kevles, Allen and Barkan amongst ot...
The article describes a troubled history of eugenics in the US, from its beginnings at the end of th...
The relationship between the British and Nazi eugenics movements has been underexamined, largely bec...
In the late 1990s, a heated debate developed in Sweden around forced sterilization between 1935 and ...
In the first decades of the 20th century, broad recognition of Francis Galton’s eugenics resulted in...
Eve Eiler was born in Fort Wayne. She enjoys World War II, U.S. and Atlantic History. She plans to c...
physicians participated in state-authorized eugenic steril-ization programs in an attempt to prevent...
The thesis "American Eugenics and Its Impact on Nazi Germany" is a study about influence of the Amer...
The question, or rather, the problem of sterilization of the unfit has been very forcibly carried in...
Contemporary concerns with technologies like CRISPR and the proliferation of state laws restricting ...
This essay uses issues of the Eugenics Quarterly from 1929 to examine the ways in which the eugenics...