Reilly P R
Q Rev Biol. 1987 Jun;62(2):153-70. doi: 10.1086/415404.
Although the eugenics movement in the United States flourished during the first quarter of the 20th Century, its roots lie in concerns over the cost of caring for "defective" persons, concerns that first became manifest in the 19th Century. The history of state-supported programs of involuntary sterilization indicates that this "surgical solution" persisted until the 1950s. A review of the archives of prominent eugenicists, the records of eugenic organizations, important legal cases, and state reports indicates that public support for the involuntary sterilization of insane and retarded persons was broad and sustained. During the early 1930s there was a dramatic increase in the number of sterilizations performed upon mildly retarded young women. This change in policy was a product of the Depression. Institutional officials were concerned that such women might bear children for whom they could not provide adequate parental care, and thus would put more demands on strained social services. There is little evidence to suggest that the excesses of the Nazi sterilization program (initiated in 1934) altered American programs. Data are presented here to show that a number of state-supported eugenic sterilization programs were quite active long after scientists had refuted the eugenic thesis.
尽管美国的优生学运动在20世纪上半叶蓬勃发展,但其根源在于对照顾“缺陷”人群成本的担忧,这种担忧在19世纪首次显现。由政府支持的非自愿绝育计划的历史表明,这种“手术解决方案”一直持续到20世纪50年代。对著名优生学家的档案、优生学组织的记录、重要法律案件以及政府报告的回顾表明,公众对精神病人和智力迟钝者的非自愿绝育广泛且持续地予以支持。在20世纪30年代初,对轻度智力迟钝年轻女性实施的绝育手术数量急剧增加。这一政策变化是大萧条的产物。机构官员担心这些女性可能会生下她们无法提供足够父母照顾的孩子,从而对本就紧张的社会服务提出更多要求。几乎没有证据表明纳粹绝育计划(始于1934年)的暴行改变了美国的计划。此处提供的数据表明,在科学家驳斥优生学论点很久之后,一些由政府支持的优生绝育计划仍相当活跃。