Study: US eugenics programme tried to 'breed out' black citizens

The new paper, published in the American Review of Political Economy, says almost 7,600 men, women and children as young as 10 were surgically sterilised under the programme, preventing people deemed "feebleminded" and others from becoming parents.

In this June 16, 2011 photo, Delores Marks holds a photograph of her mother, Margaret Helen Cheek, far left, who was sterilised during North Carolina's eugenics programme at Cherry Hospital in Goldsboro, North Carolina, where she was a patient for more than 10 years.
AP

In this June 16, 2011 photo, Delores Marks holds a photograph of her mother, Margaret Helen Cheek, far left, who was sterilised during North Carolina's eugenics programme at Cherry Hospital in Goldsboro, North Carolina, where she was a patient for more than 10 years.

A sterilisation programme that ran in the US state of North Carolina from 1929 to 1974 was explicitly designed to "breed out" black citizens and met the UN definition of genocide, a study said this week.

Almost 7,600 men, women and children as young as 10 were surgically sterilised under the programme that was created to serve the "public good" by preventing people deemed "feebleminded" and others from becoming parents.

Most were coerced but some women who had no other means of birth control sought out sterilisation by having themselves declared unfit mothers.

The new paper was published in the American Review of Political Economy.

It examined the years 1958 to 1968, a period in which more than 2,100 authorised sterilisations occurred across the state's 100 counties.

The authors found that, for the period they studied, sterilisation rates increased with the size of the unemployed black population, but unemployed whites and other races were not similarly targeted.

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'Act of genocide'

William Darity Jr, a professor at Duke University and co-author, said the UN's definition of genocide cites intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.

This includes, according to the text of the Geneva Convention, "imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group".

"North Carolina's disproportionate use of eugenic sterilisation on its black citizens was an act of genocide," said Darity.

Previous work had shown that the eugenics programme had disproportionately targeted black people, but the new paper shed light on the mechanics by which the program worked and its motives.

"Controlling black bodies and their reproductive choices is nothing new," added co-author Rhonda Sharpe of the Women's Institute for Science, Equity and Race.

"Our study shows that North Carolina restricted reproductive freedom, using eugenics to disenfranchise black residents."

The state set up a foundation in 2010 to compensate living victims of the program.

The first checks, written for $20,000 each, were mailed to 220 of those survivors in 2014, according to North Carolina's The News & Observer newspaper.

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