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Excessive force: power, politics, and population control ; an essay on the benevolent superpower, sustainable development, and other contemporary myths.

Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Washington : Information Project for Africa, 1995Subject(s): Population | Developing countries -- Economic development//international relations//family planning//fertility/. -- Developing countries -- Economic development//international relations//family planning//fertilitySummary: This book examines the view held by many in the west that other people ought to limit their fertility bacause they are different in culture, class, religious affiliation, lifestyle or political identity. It also explores consequences of extending this concept of "group superiority" into the arena of global politics where it becomes an instrument of power or of conquest.
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This book examines the view held by many in the west that other people ought to limit their fertility bacause they are different in culture, class, religious affiliation, lifestyle or political identity. It also explores consequences of extending this concept of "group superiority" into the arena of global politics where it becomes an instrument of power or of conquest.

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