The Politics of Abortion and Birth Control in Historical Perspective
182 pages | 6 x 9 | 1996
Cloth edition is not available
ISBN 978-0-271-01570-5 | paper: $28.00 sh
Issues in Policy History 6 Series

Essays examining birth control, abortion, family planning, and population control in a public policy context from the nineteenth century to the present.
While there is extensive literature on the social history, politics, and legal aspects of birth control and abortion in the United States, the history of family planning as a policy remains to be fully recorded. This volume is intended to contribute to this history by examining birth control and abortion within a larger cultural, policy, and comparative framework. The essays contained in this volume represent a variety of perspectives and scholarly interests. In many instances the authors differ with each other as well as with the editor on fundamental points of historical interpretation. They all, however, share a commitment to study the politics of population within a scholarly framework that emphasizes the importance of policy history for understanding past and contemporary problems.
Donald T. Critchlow is Professor of History at Saint Louis University and the author of The Brookings Institution, 1916-1952: Expertise and the Public Interest in a Democratic Society (Northern Illinois, 1985), as well as the editor of five other books.
Contents
Birth
Control, Population Control, and Family Planning: An Overview Donald
T. Critchlow
The Birth-Control Movement Before Roe v. Wade James W. Reed
"Sound Law and Undoubtedly Good Policy": Roe v. Wade in Comparative
Perspective Ian Mylchreest
World Population Growth, Family Planning, and American Foreign Policy
John Sharpless
Cultural Politics at the Edge of Life James Davison Hunter and
Joseph E. Davis
The Right to Life Movement: Sources, Development, and Strategies
Keith Cassidy
The Survival of the Pro-Choice Movement Suzanne Staggenborg
Selected Bibliography Donald T. Critchlow and Christina Sanders
