Population Control as a Human Right: International Law and the Global Quest to Curb Overpopulation

Author:   Roman Birke (Dublin City University)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781009601160


Pages:   234
Publication Date:   23 October 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Population Control as a Human Right: International Law and the Global Quest to Curb Overpopulation


Overview

Concerns about global overpopulation spread rapidly in the 1940s and still persist today. The UN Resolution on Human Rights and Family Planning (1968) provided justifications for the argument that population growth endangered the realization of human rights and codified a right to contraception to halt this growth. Conversely, human rights were also invoked on the other side of this debate, with family planning regarded as an essential individual right independent of demographic considerations. Roman Birke explores how human rights became central to this debate, utilised by international actors including NGOs, the women's movement, international lawyers, and institutions such as the United Nations. He analyses how couples' intimate choices related to domestic and international policy, and how this varied across the world, through case studies of India, Ireland, the USA, and Yugoslavia. This is an essential contribution to the evolving literature on the role of reproductive politics in global political landscapes.

Full Product Details

Author:   Roman Birke (Dublin City University)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Weight:   0.495kg
ISBN:  

9781009601160


ISBN 10:   1009601164
Pages:   234
Publication Date:   23 October 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements; List of figures and tables; 1. Introduction; 2. Overpopulation discourse and the post-1945 order; 3. Interventionist population policies of the 1950s; 4. Breakthrough of a human rights framework in the 1960s; 5. Interpretive struggles in the 1960s and 1970s; 6. Crisis and expansion of human rights in the 1970s; 7. Domestic interpretations of the human right to family planning; 8. Conflicts over reproductive rights since the 1980s; 9. Conclusion; References; Archives.

Reviews

'This original and important work analyzes the surprising and contradictory ways in which advocates of population control invoked human rights as a justification for their policies from the 1940s on. Roman Birke reconstructs decades of debate about whether population control was a collective human right or an individual one; whether individual rights to control reproduction could be violated-even coercively- in the interests of society as a whole; whether population control was a prerequisite for realizing human rights or promoting social and economic human rights was the key to population control. Birke's meticulous analysis of the discourses of proponents and opponents of population control as a human right is accompanied by insightful case studies of how these debates played out in diverse national contexts. Population Control as a Human Right provocatively challenges prevailing understandings of the histories of human rights and of global reproductive politics.' Mary Nolan, New York University


Author Information

Roman Birke is Assistant Professor in Modern European History at Dublin City University.

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