This article focuses on the connection between the ideology of neo-Malthusianism and development
theory and practice from the mid 1940s to the present. First identified by a few demographic
experts, population policies and family planning gradually turned into a global
movement for the control of world population. From the beginning, population discourses
and policies were intertwined with strategies of socioeconomic development. They were also
a reflection of strategic concerns and deliberations about the role of the West in the Cold
War and vis-a`-vis the emerging Global South. Focusing on the collective impact of individual
choices, population controllers assumed that top-down approaches could swiftly change
reproductive behaviour. They gave priority to preventing births over health, education, and
female empowerment. Family planning began to shift its emphasis from the collective to
the individual only in response to outright coercive actions and with the emergence of new
actors, most notably feminists, from the late 1970s on.
«This article focuses on the connection between the ideology of neo-Malthusianism and development
theory and practice from the mid 1940s to the present. First identified by a few demographic
experts, population policies and family planning gradually turned into a global
movement for the control of world population. From the beginning, population discourses
and policies were intertwined with strategies of socioeconomic development. They were also
a reflection of strategic concerns and de...
»