Richard Soloway offers a compelling and authoritative study of the
relationship of the eugenics movement to the dramatic decline in
the birthrate and family size in twentieth-century Britain. Working
in a tradition of hereditarian determinism which held fast to the
premise that "like tends to beget like," eugenicists developed and
promoted a theory of biosocial engineering through selective
reproduction. Soloway shows that the appeal of eugenics to the
middle and upper classes of British society was closely linked to
recurring concerns about the relentless drop in fertility and the
rapid spread of birth control practices from the 1870s to World War
II.
Demography and Degeneration considers how differing
scientific and pseudoscientific theories of biological inheritance
became popularized and enmeshed in the prolonged, often contentious
national debate about "race suicide" and "the dwindling family."
Demographic statistics demonstrated that birthrates were declining
among the better-educated, most successful classes while they
remained high for the poorest, least-educated portion of the
population. For many people steeped in the ideas of social
Darwinism, eugenicist theories made this decline all the more
alarming: they feared that falling birthrates among the "better"
classes signfied a racial decline and degeneration that might
prevent Britain from successfully negotiating the myriad competive
challenges facing the nation in the twentieth century.
Although the organized eugenics movement remained small and elitist
throughout most of its history, this study demonstrates how
pervasive eugenic assumptions were in the middle and upper reaches
of British society, at least until World War II. It also traces the
important role of eugenics in the emergence of the modern family
planning movement and the formulation of population policies in the
interwar years.