Birth Control in the Decolonizing Caribbean
Reproductive Politics and Practice on Four Islands, 1930â1970
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Birth Control in the Decolonizing Caribbean
Reproductive Politics and Practice on Four Islands, 1930â1970
About This Book
Over the course of the twentieth century, campaigns to increase access to modern birth control methods spread across the globe and fundamentally altered the way people thought about and mobilized around reproduction. This book explores how a variety of actors translated this movement into practice on four islands (Jamaica, Trinidad, Barbados, and Bermuda) from the 1930sâ70s. The process of decolonization during this period led to heightened clashes over imperial and national policy and brought local class, race, and gender tensions to the surface, making debates over reproductive practices particularly evocative and illustrative of broader debates in the history of decolonization and international family planning. Birth Control in the Decolonizing Caribbean is at once a political history, a history of activism, and a social history, exploring the challenges faced by working class women as they tried to negotiate control over their reproductive lives.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-title page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures, Maps, and Tables
- Acknowledgments
- List of Acronyms
- Introduction
- 1 The Answer, an Aid, a Right: Birth Control Debates and Social Movements in the Caribbean
- 2 From Politics to Practice: The Colonial Office, Foreign Activists, and Local Family Planning Clinics
- 3 Beyond Culture or Choice: Working-Class Families and Birth Control Clinics
- 4 A Matter of Cost: Reproductive Politics, State Family Planning Programs, and Foreign Aid in the Transition to Independent Rule
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index