Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-08T15:47:10.440Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Alison Bashford, Global Population: History, Geopolitics, and Life on Earth (New York: Columbia University Press, 2014), pp. I–XII, 1–466, ISBN: 978-0-231-14766-8.

Review products

Alison Bashford, Global Population: History, Geopolitics, and Life on Earth (New York: Columbia University Press, 2014), pp. I–XII, 1–466, ISBN: 978-0-231-14766-8.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2016

Aya Homei*
Affiliation:
University of Manchester, UK
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
© The Author 2016. Published by Cambridge University Press. 

‘Think big’ is a cliché you hear time and again in this globalised world: think big in order to succeed in your career, to become leadership quality or to save the world. Bashford’s Global Population: History, Geopolitics, and Life on Earth is about how Anglophone medical, scientific and technical experts as well as activists, bureaucrats and politicians thought big about population in the period between the dawn of the nineteenth century and the late 1960s.

Population is now an established theme of the historical enquiries into medicine and healthcare. Largely, it is attributable to the idea of ‘bio-politics of the population’, originally presented by Michel Foucault in the 1970s. Foucault, in his History of Sexuality (1976), proposed that the regulations of the population constituted, alongside the disciplines of the body, a pole around which modern forms of power had been organised in the West since the seventeenth century. In the new sociopolitical context that emphasised ‘power over life’, Foucault went on, modern techniques of governance were deployed to enhance and maximise human life, both in terms of individuals and of population as the individuals’ aggregate form (Foucault and Rabinow 1991, 258–72).Footnote 1 Following the theory, a scholarship grew rapidly that studied how the notion of ‘bio-politics of the population’ mobilised certain ideas of health and medicine and how, simultaneously, medical and healthcare practices were integrated into the modern techniques of governance in a given national – and more recently transnational – context. Reproduction was regarded as an area that demonstrated the deployment of health governance in the ‘bio-politics of the population’ most vividly, and thus historical works grappling with the theme have often focused, for instance, on the process by which the idea of ‘overpopulation’ after the Second World War gave licence to birth control for the sake of population control (Chikako Takeshita 2011; Connelly 2008; Schoen 2005; Greenhalgh and Winckler 2005; Marks 2001).Footnote 2 As a result, population came to constitute a significant concept in the critical studies of medicine and healthcare, predicated on the widely held assumption that population should be first and foremost associated with issues of health.

With Global Population, Bashford makes a significant intervention into the trend in the historiography. By tracing intellectual and political discourses on world population, Bashford stresses that population was more than just about reproductive health and sex, but was ‘a spatial and economic issue, too’ (3). And, because geopolitics was at the heart of how the problem of population was articulated in terms of economy and space, the dialogue on the population problem unfolding from the 1920s onwards – a period focused on in the book – was ‘as much about geopolitics as it was about biopolitics’ (3). With the clear analytical stance, the book carefully unravels the intricate relationship between bio- and geopolitics as manifested in the historical narrative of world population. The book maps out how population was not only a vocabulary of reproductive health and sex, but also of expansive yet interlinked socioeconomic themes of food, land, space, territory, security, migration and ecology.

The book presents a total of twelve chapters that are organised into four parts. In the first part, ‘The Long Nineteenth-century’, which consists of a single chapter, the monograph embarks on the ambitious project by offering a reinterpretation of Thomas Malthus’s canonical Essay on the Principle of Population (1798) and of the thoughts of the Victorian followers of Malthus in terms of intertwined geopolitics and biopolitics. When Malthus advanced the idea of the imbalance between the exponentially incrementing rate of unchecked population growth and the food supply which grew only arithmetically, what he deemed population determinants – most crucially, availability of cultivable land and liveable space – were inherently tied to colonial geopolitics, while the matters of biopolitics concerning the performances of human bodies as ‘species bodies’ – such as sexual conduct, birth, illness and death – were among the topics that cropped up in Malthus’ idea of population checks. Likewise, when a Victorian neo-Malthusian Annie Besant endorsed birth control as a ‘humanitarian’ method of population check and hence laid a foundation for the later interpretation that saw the history of population as embedded in the histories of reproduction, medicine and gender, even such a typically biopolitical formulation of the population problem was not devoid of the implication of the themes of geopolitics. Underlining Besant’s idea of population, for instance, was also the Malthusian concept of the Earth as a ‘confined room’, but, unlike Malthus’ idea, this time, it was more symbiotic to the new idea of ecology advanced by Ernst Heackel, which, as Bashford elaborates on in the subsequent chapters, was also inherently tied to geopolitics.

The second part, ‘Politics of Earth, 1920s and 1930s’ comprises four chapters and is about the role of the politics of the Earth, that is, geopolitics in the population debate of the post World War I period. This part takes the very concept of geopolitics seriously. It makes clear that geopolitics is not only an analytical tool for the understanding of population manifested in the historical debate, but is also a construct of history that was itself tangled up with a biopolitical connotation. Geopolitics was chiefly about the struggles among modern nation states for territorial space, but the space articulated in geopolitics was ‘living’, as the term Lebensraum attested, which was inseparable from the land and population that grew from it. This specific interpretation of population as spatial literally opened up space for various experts to seize the population issue in three dimensions. Thus, when zoologist Raymond Pearl pondered over human populations, he applied the biological notion of density adversely affecting fertility rates of organisms in a bounded space. Furthermore, in the post World War I era, characterised by the rise of international exchanges among population experts, the microbiological formulation of population density was easily applied to the understanding of human population, sanctioning, for instance, Warren Thompson’s argument that high population density among humans would trigger political instability if the pressure was not relieved by means of migration or the cultivation of ‘waste lands’.

Following the second part, which focuses on the geopolitical aspects of the narrative of world population, the third part, ‘The Politics of Life, 1920s and 1930s’, offers the stories of biopolitics in the population debate of the period. This part, however, rejects the aforementioned narrow interpretation of biopolitics of population. Thus it details the population debate taking place in the hitherto uncharted fields of ecology, economics and agriculture, before revising the familiar narrative that depicts population as manifested in the politics of sex and eugenics.

The final part, ‘Between One World and Three Worlds, 1940s–68’, complicates the picture of the global population control movement, which primarily refers to the post World War II efforts among the governmental, international and philanthropic institutions to deploy aggressive family planning initiatives in Asia, Africa and Latin America as development and population control measures. The message of this part is crystal clear: although international communities eventually resorted to the regulation of fertility – or what Bashford calls the ‘biopolitical solution’ (305) – to solve the world population problem in the post-war period, geopolitical imperatives of food security, land ownership, resource and ecology, which also occupied the pre-war commentators of population, continued to act as crucial determinants in the global debate on population even after the war. A crucial difference in this period was a new way of imagining the world geography, which oscillated between the image of the one round Earth and the idea of the globe segregated into the three discernible ‘worlds’, which was originally proposed by French demographer Alfred Sauvy and consolidated in the Cold War politics. Bashford carefully chronicles how this particular view of the world(s) played a critical role in the post-war debate on population control. It was both the concern that global population growth might erode the Earth as the sole habitat for humankind and the argument that unequal distribution of resources and populations among the three ‘worlds’ might inflict further economic and political instabilities that spurred John Boyd Orr and Julian Huxley, the first heads of the new United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization and UNESCO, the newly established New York based Population Council and cosmopolitan demographers such as Sripati Chandrasekhar, Frank W. Notestein and Dudley Kirk to begin to consider fertility reduction as a possible population control measure. Still, this did not mean that the pre-war and wartime exigencies were nullified. Au contraire. For instance, the concern over population quality encroached in what appeared to be a discussion over population quantity, just as in the pre-war period. But, against the familiar narrative that associates eugenics with coercive and top-down measures of, say, sterilisation, Bashford in this part brilliantly argues that eugenics integrated in world population control in the post-war period was recalcitrant precisely because it was tied to Anglophone eugenicists’ continued investment in the concept of modern freedom. This kind of poignant analysis truly complicates the post-war global politics of world population.

In addition to introducing the new analytical framework to the critical studies of population, with Global Population Bashford changed the scholarship fundamentally in the following two ways. First was in the area of periodisation. Throughout the book, Bashford categorically emphasises that the post-war global population politics dovetailed with health, gender and sexual politics, environmentalism and cosmopolitanism was also rooted strongly in the pre-war politics of Earth and life. Secondly, by utilising a postcolonial analytic, Bashford critiques the historiographical tendency to underwrite the dualistic caricature of Western/European ‘fertility decline’ and non-Western/Asian ‘population growth’. These two points, corroborated carefully throughout the book, are powerful; they have already begun to influence the scholarship’s trajectory (eg. Homei and Huang 2016).Footnote 3

Global Population will surely become a staple in the history of medicine and healthcare, but it throws the greatest challenge at a reader, both for the same reason: it appears to give a straightforward account on the Anglophone genealogy of population thoughts, but, at the same time, resiliently refuses to be complacent with one methodological perspective or to rely on cliché and reduce complex narratives to a discernible pattern. On the one hand, it is about how Malthus formulated population and how the likes of George Drysdale, Carlos Paton Blacker, Alexander Carr-Saunders, George Knibbs, Margaret Sanger, Radhakamal Mukerjee and Kingsley Davis engaged with the population problem where relevant to the backgrounds from which they came. It was an attempt to unravel discourses on global population by ‘putting together’ the participating factors for the formulation of the world population problem, that is, eugenics, Malthusianism, feminism, ecology, economics and environmentalism (360). But, on the other hand, the book presents convoluted histories as they are, and forcefully thrusts to the fore the aspects of inconsistencies and conflicts in the arguments, beliefs and moral judgements about the world population problem. It is an extremely difficult book to summarise, but it is precisely because of this that the book merits attention and praise. The book, indeed, helps you to think big.

References

1. Foucault, Michel and Rabinow, Paul, The Foucault Reader (London: Penguin Books, 1991).Google Scholar

2. Chikako Takeshita, The Global Biopolitics of the IUD: How Science Constructs Contraceptive Users and Women’s Bodies (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2011); Matthew James Connelly, Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2008); Susan Greenhalgh and Edwin A. Winckler, Governing China’s Population: From Leninist to Neoliberal Biopolitics (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2005); Lara Marks, Sexual Chemistry: A History of the Contraceptive Pill (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2001); Johanna Schoen, Choice & Coercion: Birth Control, Sterilization, and Abortion in Public Health and Welfare (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, NC, 2005).Google Scholar

3. Aya Homei and Yu-ling Huang, ‘Population Control in Cold War Asia: Introduction’, East Asian Science, Technology and Society, forthcoming.Google Scholar