Confronting Bolivia's "Lack of Demographic Capacity": Protonatalism in Post-Revolutionary Bolivia, 1950s-1970s

Autor/innen

  • Nicole Pacino University of Alabama in Huntsville

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15460/jbla.59.260

Schlagwörter:

Bolivian Revolution, Infant Mortality, Family Planning, Maternal Health, Population Control, Protonalism

Abstract

After coming to power in April 1952, the Movimiento Nacionalista Revolucionario (MNR) looked to address Bolivia’s economic problems, in part, through initiatives encouraging population growth. A 1953 report highlighted underpopulation as a cause of Bolivia’s limited economic potential. The solution to Bolivia’s “lack of demographic capacity” was public health measures that would lower morbidity and mortality rates and encourage reproduction to boost the country’s human capital. This article analyzes prevalent pronatalist tendencies in the MNR government, including positive eugenics and criticism of birth control, to demonstrate the centrality of population growth to the MNR’s political and economic agenda. At a time when other Latin American countries began implementing population control measures as a pathway to economic growth and political stability, as recommended by the United States and international organizations, Bolivia diverged from global discourses about overpopulation and embraced pronatalism. While the MNR welcomed some global development ideologies associated with modernization, they rejected population control and reframed population debates towards population growth and demographic reorganization. They married pronatalism with a modernizing agenda and revolutionary nationalism, demonstrating that MNR policies were fundamentally conservative on matters of reproduction and gender roles.

Autor/innen-Biografie

  • Nicole Pacino, University of Alabama in Huntsville

    Nicole Pacino is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. Her research, based on archival collections both in Bolivia and the United States, explores how health, hygiene, and sanitation became an integral part of conversations about political change and economic stability after Bolivia’s 1952 revolution. Her published articles can be found in journals based in the United States, Latin America, and Europe, including the Bulletin of Latin American Research, Diplomatic History, the Journal of Women’s History, and História, Ciências, Saúde-Manguinhos.

Veröffentlicht

2023-01-30

URN

Zitationsvorschlag

Confronting Bolivia’s "Lack of Demographic Capacity": Protonatalism in Post-Revolutionary Bolivia, 1950s-1970s. (2023). Jahrbuch für Geschichte Lateinamerikas, 59, 64-98. https://doi.org/10.15460/jbla.59.260