4.1 • 885 Ratings
🗓️ 23 December 2022
⏱️ 30 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Who should be prevented from having children? And who gets to decide? Across 20th century America, there was a battle to control birth - a battle which rages on to this day.
In 1907, the state of Indiana passed the first sterilisation law in the world. Government-run institutions were granted the power to sterilise those deemed degenerate - often against their will. In the same period, women are becoming more educated, empowered and sexually liberated. In the Roaring Twenties, the flappers start dancing the Charleston and women win the right to vote.
But contraception is still illegal and utterly taboo. The pioneering campaigner Margaret Sanger, begins her decades long activism to secure women access to birth control - the only way, she argues, women can be truly free. In the final part of the episode, sterilisation survivor and campaigner Elaine Riddick shares her painful but remarkable story.
Contributors: Professor Alexandra Minna Stern from the UCLA Institue of Society and Genetics, Professor Wendy Kline from Purdue Univerity, Elaine and Tony Riddick from the Rebecca Project for Justice Featuring the voice of Joanna Monro
Music and Sound Design by Jon Nicholls Presented by Adam Rutherford Produced by IIan Goodman
Clips: Coverage of Dobbs v Jackson Supreme Court decision from June 24, 2022 including BBC News / CBS News correspondent Jan Crawford / BBC News Sarah Smith / audio of protesters from Channel 4 News. / Mike Wallace interviews Margaret Sanger, September 1957, from the archive at the Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin
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0:00.0 | This was an impregnable fortress. The only way you get out was in a wooden box. |
0:05.0 | The controversial maximum security prison impossible to escape from. |
0:09.0 | And one of the duties of a political prisoner is the escape. |
0:12.0 | The IRA inmates who found a way. of a political prisoner is the escape. |
0:12.5 | The IRA inmates who found a way. |
0:14.5 | I'm Carlo Gableer and I'll be navigating a path |
0:19.5 | through the disturbing inside story of the biggest jailbreak in British and Irish history. |
0:25.0 | The narrative that they want is that this is a big achievement by them. |
0:28.5 | Escape from the maze, listen first on BBC Sounds. |
0:35.0 | BBC Sounds. BBC Sounds, music radio podcasts. |
0:39.0 | Hello, I'm Adam Rutherford, you're listening to you seriously from BBC Radio 4. |
0:44.0 | You're about to hear Birth Controlled, the third episode of Bad Blood. |
0:48.7 | Eugenesis in 20th century America are on a mission to control who gets to have children and who doesn't. |
0:55.3 | From the Salons of Victorian Britain to the gates of Auschwitz. |
1:03.6 | This is the story of an idea which runs through some of the worst atrocities of the 20th century, |
1:09.6 | an idea that echoes through the decades and resonates today. This is the story of eugenics. |
1:16.4 | Its dark history and its troubling present. |
1:19.7 | To bring you some breaking news now. The United States Supreme Court has overturned |
1:26.4 | Roe v. Wa. Wa. |
1:27.8 | We're outside the Supreme Court after the landmark decision that ended a woman's constitutional right to an abortion. |
1:34.3 | As they hear the news from the court, there's jubilation from anti-abortionists. |
1:38.6 | Five points a day! |
... |
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