The Shortest History of Eugenics

From "Science" to Atrocity - How a Dangerous Movement Shaped the World, and Why It Persists

Erik Peterson author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:The Experiment LLC

Publishing:18th Nov '24

£13.99

This title is due to be published on 18th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The Shortest History of Eugenics cover

For the last two centuries, groups of influential men have, in the professed interest of fiscal responsibility, crime reduction, and outright racism, attempted to control who was allowed to bear children. Their efforts, “eugenics,” characterise a movement that over the last century swept across the world - from the US to Brazil, Japan, India, Australia, and beyond - in the form of marriage restrictions, asylum detention, and sterilisation campaigns affected millions. German physicians and scientists adopted and then heightened these eugenics practices beginning in 1939, starving or executing those they deemed “life unworthy of life.” But well after the liberation of Nazi deathcamps, health care workers and even the US government pursued policies worldwide with the express purpose of limiting the reproduction of poor non-whites. The Shortest History of Eugenics takes us back to the founding principles of the movement, revealing how an idea that began in cattle breeding took such an insidious turn - and how it lingers in rhetoric and policy today.

ISBN: 9781891011887

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 300g

304 pages