Planning the American Family: The Politics of Government Family Planning Programs from the Great Society to the New Right

This dissertation examines the creation and development of the United States government's Title X family planning program from 1965 to 1988. It argues that Title X became controversial when its supporters shifted their focus from promoting family self-sufficiency to celebrating individual repro...

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Main Author: Rodberg, Josie
Other Authors: Cott, Nancy F.
Language:en_US
Published: Harvard University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10999
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11004924
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spelling ndltd-harvard.edu-oai-dash.harvard.edu-1-110049242015-08-14T15:42:18ZPlanning the American Family: The Politics of Government Family Planning Programs from the Great Society to the New RightRodberg, JosieAmerican historyabortionbirth controlfamily planningNew RightPlanned ParenthoodTitle XThis dissertation examines the creation and development of the United States government's Title X family planning program from 1965 to 1988. It argues that Title X became controversial when its supporters shifted their focus from promoting family self-sufficiency to celebrating individual reproductive freedom. The new individualist arguments profoundly threatened many Americans who wanted government policy to support the patriarchal nuclear family. Support for federally-subsidized family planning programs in the 1960s rested on an ideology of nuclear family economic independence. Advocates reasoned that birth control services would enable poor Americans, especially African-Americans, to have children only within stable, self-sufficient marriages. Using these arguments, family planning advocates developed nearly-unanimous support for family planning programs among federal policymakers. In the early 1970s, though, family planning supporters embraced feminist and anti-racist critiques of their earlier ideas, leading them to promote subsidized family planning as a route to individual women’s reproductive freedom. In turn, the dissertation examines the growth of the New Right in reaction to the new liberal focus on individual freedom. While some dissenters had opposed family planning programs in the 1960s, this opposition mushroomed in the 1970s as opponents identified Title X as a threat to the family. Family planning opponents focused on two aspects of subsidized birth control programs that endangered the patriarchal nuclear family: abortion and teenagers’ access to contraception. Both of these issues jeopardized the husband’s and father’s authority over his dependents. In addition, opponents claimed that federal government spending on Title X overused their tax dollars, compromising their own ability to be self-sufficient and, thus, the survival of their own independent nuclear families. As a result, they mobilized in opposition to Title X in the 1970s and 1980s. The dissertation uses a wide variety of archival materials, government documents, and published sources to document the trajectory of debates over federally-funded family planning programsHistoryCott, Nancy F.2013-09-04T21:34:32Z2013-09-042013Thesis or DissertationRodberg, Josie. 2013. Planning the American Family: The Politics of Government Family Planning Programs from the Great Society to the New Right. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10999http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11004924en_USclosed accessHarvard University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic American history
abortion
birth control
family planning
New Right
Planned Parenthood
Title X
spellingShingle American history
abortion
birth control
family planning
New Right
Planned Parenthood
Title X
Rodberg, Josie
Planning the American Family: The Politics of Government Family Planning Programs from the Great Society to the New Right
description This dissertation examines the creation and development of the United States government's Title X family planning program from 1965 to 1988. It argues that Title X became controversial when its supporters shifted their focus from promoting family self-sufficiency to celebrating individual reproductive freedom. The new individualist arguments profoundly threatened many Americans who wanted government policy to support the patriarchal nuclear family. Support for federally-subsidized family planning programs in the 1960s rested on an ideology of nuclear family economic independence. Advocates reasoned that birth control services would enable poor Americans, especially African-Americans, to have children only within stable, self-sufficient marriages. Using these arguments, family planning advocates developed nearly-unanimous support for family planning programs among federal policymakers. In the early 1970s, though, family planning supporters embraced feminist and anti-racist critiques of their earlier ideas, leading them to promote subsidized family planning as a route to individual women’s reproductive freedom. In turn, the dissertation examines the growth of the New Right in reaction to the new liberal focus on individual freedom. While some dissenters had opposed family planning programs in the 1960s, this opposition mushroomed in the 1970s as opponents identified Title X as a threat to the family. Family planning opponents focused on two aspects of subsidized birth control programs that endangered the patriarchal nuclear family: abortion and teenagers’ access to contraception. Both of these issues jeopardized the husband’s and father’s authority over his dependents. In addition, opponents claimed that federal government spending on Title X overused their tax dollars, compromising their own ability to be self-sufficient and, thus, the survival of their own independent nuclear families. As a result, they mobilized in opposition to Title X in the 1970s and 1980s. The dissertation uses a wide variety of archival materials, government documents, and published sources to document the trajectory of debates over federally-funded family planning programs === History
author2 Cott, Nancy F.
author_facet Cott, Nancy F.
Rodberg, Josie
author Rodberg, Josie
author_sort Rodberg, Josie
title Planning the American Family: The Politics of Government Family Planning Programs from the Great Society to the New Right
title_short Planning the American Family: The Politics of Government Family Planning Programs from the Great Society to the New Right
title_full Planning the American Family: The Politics of Government Family Planning Programs from the Great Society to the New Right
title_fullStr Planning the American Family: The Politics of Government Family Planning Programs from the Great Society to the New Right
title_full_unstemmed Planning the American Family: The Politics of Government Family Planning Programs from the Great Society to the New Right
title_sort planning the american family: the politics of government family planning programs from the great society to the new right
publisher Harvard University
publishDate 2013
url http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10999
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11004924
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