Controlling Reproduction and Disrupting Family Formation: California Women’s Prisons and the Violent Legacy of Eugenics

Author:

Avila Vrindavani1,James Jennifer Elyse2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cultural Studies Graduate Group, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA

2. Institute for Health and Aging, School of Nursing, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA

Abstract

Prisons in the United States serve as a site and embodiment of gendered and racialized state violence. The US incarcerates more people than any other nation in both numbers and per capita rates. Individuals incarcerated in women’s prisons are 10% of the total prison population, yet women’s prisons remain understudied, and the violence that occurs in women’s facilities is rampant, widespread, and operates in particular racialized and gendered ways. This paper centers the forced sterilizations that occurred in California state prisons over the last two decades. We consider how reproduction and the nuclear family have served as a primary site of racial capitalism and eugenic ideology. While eugenic policies were popularized and promoted across the US and globally in the 20th century, the violent ideas underlying eugenic ideology have been a constant presence throughout US history. The height of the eugenics era is marked by the forcible sterilization of institutionalized ‘deviant’ bodies. While discussions of eugenics often center these programs, the reach of eugenic policies extends far beyond surgical interventions. We utilize a reproductive justice lens to argue that the hierarchical, racialized social stratification necessary for the existence of prisons constructs and sustains the ‘deviant’ bodies and families that predicate eugenic logic, policies, and practices. In this conceptual paper, we draw from ongoing research to argue that prisons, as institutions and as a product of racial capitalism, perpetuate the ongoing violent legacy of eugenics and name abolition as a central component of the fight to end reproductive oppression.

Funder

Greenwall Foundation Faculty Scholars Program

Society of Family Planning Changemaker in Family Planning Award

UCSF School of Nursing Gaine Fund

UCSF Clinical and Translational Science Institute

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference56 articles.

1. (2023, September 13). Cal. Code Regs. Tit. 22, § 70707.1-Criteria for the Performance of Sterilization. Available online: https://www.law.cornell.edu/regulations/california/22-CCR-70707.1.

2. Johnson, C.G. (2023, March 24). Female Inmates Sterilized in California Prisons without Approval. Available online: http://revealnews.org/article/female-inmates-sterilized-in-california-prisons-without-approval/.

3. Stern, A.M. (2005). Eugenic Nation: Faults and Frontiers of Better Breeding in Modern America, University of California Press. American Crossroads.

4. Sterilized in the name of public health: Race, immigration, and reproductive control in modern California;Stern;Am. J. Public Health,2005

5. Roberts, D. (2011). Fatal Invention: How Science, Politics, and Big Business Re-Create Race in the Twenty-First Century, The New Press.

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