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World Population Growth, Family Planning, and American Foreign Policy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 October 2011

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The U.S. government position on world population growth as it emerged in the early 1960s was a fundamental departure in both content and commitment. We embraced the idea that one of the goals of American foreign policy should be the simultaneous reduction of both mortality and fertility across the Third World. It was not simply rhetoric. As the years passed, we committed a growing portion of our foreign aid to that end. The decision to link U.S. foreign-policy objectives with the subsidy of family planning and population control was truly exceptional in that it explicitly aimed at altering the demographic structure of foreign countries through long-term intervention. No nation had ever set in motion a foreign-policy initiative of such magnitude. Its ultimate goal was no less than to alter the basic fertility behavior of the entire Third World! Whether one views this goal as idealistic and naive or as arrogant and self-serving, the project was truly of herculean proportions.

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Articles
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Copyright © The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA. 1995

References

Notes

1. Research for this essay was funded by grants from the Social Science Research Council, the Rockefeller Archive Center, and the Graduate School of the University of Wisconsin. None of these institutions is responsible for the opinions expressed. I wish to thank Wendy Sundby for her editorial assistance in the final preparation of the manuscript.

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