Population Policy and the U.S. Constitution
A few decades ago a monograph on the legal aspects of population control would have looked mainly at legal prohibitions. The salient legal problems were restriction of the use of birth control and dissemination of information about it. The assumption in such an approach would have been that effective population control is legally affected only by the clearly stated restrictions in the law. In other respects, the law could be assumed to be neutral. Judicial and legislative changes have eliminated practically all restrictions on the means of contraception. This development, how­ ever, has not freed population from its relation to the law; on the contrary, it has exposed the importance of law as a motivating force for and against population control. Although much applied work in population control is directed toward the distribution of contracep­ tives, concentration on the means of population control has shown itself to be of doubtful value. From many sides the primary importance of motivation has been recognized, along with the need to influence motivation and to analyze the conditions under which motivational change is possible. At this point the role of the law ix X FOREWORD becomes apparent, along with the recognition that law has not been neutral in this issue-that, in fact, it cannot be neutral. Larry Barnett has undertaken a pioneering effort in identifying the areas of law important to changing people's motivations in regard to population control and to a reduction in individual family size.
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Population Policy and the U.S. Constitution
A few decades ago a monograph on the legal aspects of population control would have looked mainly at legal prohibitions. The salient legal problems were restriction of the use of birth control and dissemination of information about it. The assumption in such an approach would have been that effective population control is legally affected only by the clearly stated restrictions in the law. In other respects, the law could be assumed to be neutral. Judicial and legislative changes have eliminated practically all restrictions on the means of contraception. This development, how­ ever, has not freed population from its relation to the law; on the contrary, it has exposed the importance of law as a motivating force for and against population control. Although much applied work in population control is directed toward the distribution of contracep­ tives, concentration on the means of population control has shown itself to be of doubtful value. From many sides the primary importance of motivation has been recognized, along with the need to influence motivation and to analyze the conditions under which motivational change is possible. At this point the role of the law ix X FOREWORD becomes apparent, along with the recognition that law has not been neutral in this issue-that, in fact, it cannot be neutral. Larry Barnett has undertaken a pioneering effort in identifying the areas of law important to changing people's motivations in regard to population control and to a reduction in individual family size.
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Population Policy and the U.S. Constitution

Population Policy and the U.S. Constitution

by L.D. Barnett
Population Policy and the U.S. Constitution

Population Policy and the U.S. Constitution

by L.D. Barnett

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1982)

$54.99 
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Overview

A few decades ago a monograph on the legal aspects of population control would have looked mainly at legal prohibitions. The salient legal problems were restriction of the use of birth control and dissemination of information about it. The assumption in such an approach would have been that effective population control is legally affected only by the clearly stated restrictions in the law. In other respects, the law could be assumed to be neutral. Judicial and legislative changes have eliminated practically all restrictions on the means of contraception. This development, how­ ever, has not freed population from its relation to the law; on the contrary, it has exposed the importance of law as a motivating force for and against population control. Although much applied work in population control is directed toward the distribution of contracep­ tives, concentration on the means of population control has shown itself to be of doubtful value. From many sides the primary importance of motivation has been recognized, along with the need to influence motivation and to analyze the conditions under which motivational change is possible. At this point the role of the law ix X FOREWORD becomes apparent, along with the recognition that law has not been neutral in this issue-that, in fact, it cannot be neutral. Larry Barnett has undertaken a pioneering effort in identifying the areas of law important to changing people's motivations in regard to population control and to a reduction in individual family size.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789401727204
Publisher: Springer Netherlands
Publication date: 01/11/2013
Series: Kluwer-Nijhoff Studies in Human Issues
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1982
Pages: 183
Product dimensions: 0.00(w) x 0.00(h) x 0.02(d)

Table of Contents

I Legal Dimensions of the Population Issue.- 1 Introduction.- 2 Population and Law.- 3 Population Growth and the Right of Privacy.- II Some Factors Affecting Childbearing.- 4 Constitutional Law and “the Tragedy of the Commons”.- 5 Legal Protection and Female Employment.- 6 Housing Policies Prohibiting Children.- III Fertility Control Policies: Some Possibilities.- 7 Government Regulation of Sexual Relationships.- 8 Taxation and the Control of Fertility.- 9 Tuition in the Public Schools.- IV Two Contemporary Controversial Issues.- 10 Abortion.- 11 Immigration.- Afterword.- Notes.
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