&
(Embedded image moved to file: pic14062.jpg)
              invite you to a book launch of a recent Harvard University Press
                                        publication
            |---------------------+--------------------------------------------|
            |                     |                                            |
            |                     |                                            |
            |                     |            Fatal Misconception             |
            |                     |  The Struggle to Control World Population  |
            |                     |            by Matthew Connelly             |
            |   (Embedded image   |                                            |
            |   moved to file:    |  "How the World Bank Tried to Control the  |
            |    pic10426.jpg)    |  Population of the World, and Failed."     |
            |                     |                                            |
            |                     |  In   the   1970s  a  host  of  NGOs  and  |
            |                     |  international  organizations,  including  |
            |                     |  the  World  Bank, declared a ?population  |
            |                     |  crisis?   and   demanded   an  emergency  |
            |                     |  response,       including      earmarked  |
            |                     |  appropriations  and "incentive payments"  |
            |                     |  to    persuade   poor   people   to   be  |
            |                     |  sterilized.  So  much money poured in so  |
            |                     |  fast  that  spending  became an end onto  |
            |                     |  itself.  The  pressure  to  scale up and  |
            |                     |  show  results  transformed organizations  |
            |                     |  ostensibly  dedicated  to helping people  |
            |                     |  plan   their  families  into  tools  for  |
            |                     |  social  engineering. Leaders like Robert  |
            |                     |  McNamara  pushed  ?crash programs," even  |
            |                     |  though the risks entailed were palpable,  |
            |                     |  including  the long-range sustainability  |
            |                     |  of  programs that really were devoted to  |
            |                     |  advancing    reproductive   rights   and  |
            |                     |  health.  Rather  than accept constraints  |
            |                     |  or accountability, they preferred to let  |
            |                     |  population control go out of control. It  |
            |                     |  finally  culminated  with  the Emergency  |
            |                     |  Period in India, when over eight million  |
            |                     |  people were sterilized in a single year.  |
            |                     |                                            |
            |                     |                                            |
            |---------------------+--------------------------------------------|
                            Tuesday, April 8th, 2008
                                12:30 - 2:00 pm
                               Auditorium JB1-080
                             World Bank J Building
                               701 18th Street NW
        For non Bank staff, please RSVP to infoshopevents@worldbank.org
                                    PRESENTED BY AUTHOR
                                Matthew Connelly
                     Associate Professor of History,Columbia University
            Professor  Connelly  works  in international and global history. His
            publications  include  A  Diplomatic Revolution: Algeria?s Fight for
            Independence  and  the  Origins  of the Post-Cold War Era (2002) and
            research articles in Comparative Studies in Society and History, The
            International   Journal   of   Middle  East  Studies,  The  American
            Historical  Review, The Review française d?histoire d?Outre-mer, and
            Past  &  Present.  He has also published commentary on international
            affairs in The Atlantic Monthly and The National Interest.
                                        MODERATED BY
                                   Varun Gauri
                                Senior Economist
            Mr.Gauri  is a Senior Economist in the Development Research Group of
            the  World  Bank. His research focuses on politics and governance in
            the social sectors, and aims to combine quantitative and qualitative
            methods  in  economics  and  social  science research. He is leading
            research  projects  on  the  impact  of  legal  strategies  to claim
            economic  and  social  rights, and on the cross-country diffusion of
            development  innovations.  He has published papers on a wide variety
            of  topics,  including the political economy of government responses
            to  HIV/AIDS,  the strategic choices of development NGOs, the use of
            vouchers   for  basic  education,  and  immunization  in  developing
            countries,  and was a core team member of the 2007 World Development
            Report.
            ________________________________________________________________________________________________________
            About the InfoShop
            The  InfoShop is the public information center of the World Bank and
            serves   as   a   forum  for  substantial  debate  on  international
            development.  Our extensive events program consists of more than 250
            events  over  the past two years and has hosted many internationally
            recognized  speakers including Queen Noor, Francis Fukuyama, Jeffrey
            Sachs,  Amartya  Sen,  Joseph  Stiglitz,  Thomas Friedman, and Carly
            Fiorina.   The  InfoShop  functions  as the only publicly accessible
            space  at  headquarters and provides internal and external audiences
            with  over  15,000 titles published by the World Bank, international
            organizations, and other publishers on development issues.
            For more information, visit: www.worldbank.org/infoshop
           Comments about the events program:
          



 

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