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Wanting Children: Family-Planning Policies and the Engineering of America's Population

Autor Leonard M. Lopoo
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 iun 2026
On the eugenic origins of US reproductive laws—and the surprising policy changes needed to remedy it.
The US government spends hundreds of millions of dollars every year to promote and facilitate contraception. Whereas other wealthy countries support broader fertility interventions under the banner of “family planning,” the United States remains committed only to helping Americans—and especially poorer Americans—plan not to have a family.
In an unflinching treatise on one of the century’s defining social issues, Leonard M. Lopoo shows how the US’s asymmetric reproductive approach is a vestige of the country’s earlier sins: America’s first reproductive policies were authored by some of the twentieth century’s most prominent eugenicists, a group whose primary goal was birth prevention among lower economic classes and racial minorities. These origins have consequently created a contradictory position for the country today, in which contraception for the lowest-income Americans is subsidized, while many upper-class Americans employ technologies to have children with preferable traits.
Lopoo recasts this personal and politicized topic in elegant, stark terms. If the United States is to legislate reproduction, the only defensible approach is equity: helping people who want children to have children. Wanting Children posits a new and elevating criterion for how we think about fertility in the twenty-first century.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226850160
ISBN-10: 0226850161
Pagini: 176
Ilustrații: 3 halftones, 6 tables
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press

Notă biografică

Leonard M. Lopoo is the Paul Volcker Chair in Behavioral Economics and professor, chair, and associate dean of public administration and international affairs at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School, where he directs the Maxwell X Lab and serves as senior research associate in the Center for Policy Research. His popular writing has appeared in the Wall Street Journal.

Cuprins

1. The Incompleteness of Government-Sponsored Family-Planning Programs
2. A Brief History of Eugenics
3. The Population-Stabilization Period
4. Medicaid as a Test Case
5. The Future Gap
6. On Wantedness
7. Who Gets to Have Children?
Acknowledgments
Notes
References

Recenzii

"In Wanting Children, Leonard Lopoo spotlights the ways that government family-planning policies are directed exclusively at limiting childbearing, especially among the poor. In this thought-provoking and empirically rich book, he rightly argues that these policies should also be aimed at helping families have children. His argument is especially needed at a time when American fertility has hit record lows.”

“From state-driven eugenics to parent-driven embryo selection, Wanting Children confronts a future where choice and technology reshape reproduction. Lopoo’s call to expand access to assisted reproductive technologies is bold and provocative—raising timely questions about equity and ethics in family planning.”