Initially known as the American Eugenics Society, or AES, the Society formed after the success of the
Second International Congress on Eugenics (
New York, 1921). AES founders included
Madison Grant,
Harry H. Laughlin,
Irving Fisher,
Henry Fairfield Osborn,
Charles Davenport and
Henry Crampton. The organization started by promoting racial betterment, eugenic health, and genetic education through public lectures, exhibits at county fairs, etc. To gain popularity with the public, the eugenics movement adopted "two faces," a positive and negative face. The 'positive' side of this movement focused on emphasizing the urge for the "genetically gifted" to reproduce. The 'negative' face of the eugenics campaign involved efforts to prevent the "defective" individuals from reproducing. This negative side of the eugenics movement catalyzed anti-immigration movements of the early twentieth centuries because of the idea that non-whites and immigrants were "inferior" to "native-born white Americans" in terms of intelligence, physical condition, and moral stature. The AES primarily used fitter family contests to help promote its mission. These fitter family contests took place in public festivals or fairs. Physical appearance, behavior, intelligence, and health were just a few of the qualities that the AES looked at while determining the fittest family. The AES would give out prizes, trophies, and medals to the winning families. Additionally, the AES would sponsor displays and exhibits that featured statistics on the births of "undesirable" or "desirable" children at the fairs and festivals. An example of such a display from the 1920s and 1930s statistics claimed as follows: Every sixteen seconds, a child is born in the United States. Out of those children, a capable, desirable child is born every seven and a half minutes, whereas an undesirable, feebleminded child is born every forty-eight seconds, and a future criminal is born every fifty seconds. To conclude, the display would argue that every fifteen seconds, a hundred dollars of taxpayers' money went towards supporting the mentally ill and undesirable. Following all of these tests and examinations, each participant would receive a "score" and a "family level score." The AES also sought to promote eugenic policies at the US state and federal level; in particular,
Harry H. Laughlin promoted eugenic
sterilization in the early twentieth century. By the late 1920s, eugenic sterilization laws were being enforced in multiple states (
Sterilization law in the United States). By 1933, California had enforced eugenically sterilization laws on more people than any of the other US states combined, mainly affecting people of color and foreign immigrants. These laws led to court cases and lawsuits, such as
Buck v. Bell (1927) and
Skinner v. Oklahoma (1942). In 1926, the society published a
Eugenics Catechism, arguing that eugenics was supported by the Bible, and therefore ought to be promoted by Christians. During the presidency of
Henry Farnham Perkins from 1931 to 1933, the AES worked with the
American Birth Control League.
Margaret Sanger, a birth control activist, was a member of the AES in 1956 and established the
American Birth Control League in 1921. Sanger continued to believe in and push for women's reproductive rights and encouraged those in political power to steer away from racially motivated ideas or tactics involving the eugenics movement. For example, Sanger "vocally opposed" racial stereotyping which lead to the passing of the
Immigration Act of 1924, "on the grounds that intelligence" and other characteristics vary by individual, not by group. Osborn said, "[t]he name was changed because it became evident that changes of a eugenic nature would be made for reasons other than eugenics, and that tying a eugenic label on them would more often hinder than help." The name was most recently changed to Society for Biodemography and Social Biology in 2008. The name inherited the name of two disciplines (biodemography and social biology) as a result of interactions between demography and biology throughout the last half of the twentieth century. The Society was then disbanded in 2019. The disbandment of the Society was ultimately due to limits on funding, member engagement, internal tensions, and public interest, or lack thereof, in eugenics. The Society initially began to struggle finding sufficient funding. The lack of funding issue began around 1937 but continued until its official disbandment. The moving of the AES head offices from New Haven to New York in the 1930s also incurred some financial difficulties. The issue of lack of funding was never fully resolved but was not substantial enough to end the AES. As time persisted, the eugenics belief and the Society's history became increasingly unpopular amongst individuals and the Society received lots of backlash, ultimately causing its disbandment. ==Journal==