1930s To provide relief for the devastated Puerto Rican economy, the
Roosevelt administration established the Puerto Rican Emergency Relief Administration (PRERA) in 1933. The PRERA was succeeded by the
Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration (PRRA) in 1935. Analysts employed by the PRRA argued that population growth impeded its efforts to decrease unemployment. In 1936, the PRRA established a national health program that endorsed fertility control. In 1937, due to concerns about health issues and overpopulation, the
Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico passed legislation promoting sterilization with support from local
feminist activists. Numerous clinics offering sterilization and other birth control services were opened during the late 1930s. Many were operated by the Maternal and Child Health Association, which was founded by philanthropist
Clarence Gamble, the heir to the
Procter & Gamble soap fortune.
1940s After learning about
Nazi human experimentation during
World War II, the public began to view the term "negative eugenics" more negatively. However, concerns about overpopulation, as expressed by conservationists such as
Henry Fairfield Osborn and
William Vogt, grew in popularity during the postwar period. These authors blamed the war on overpopulation and the overexploitation of nature, condemned consumerism and the idea of unchecked economic growth, and warned that new
Cold War foreign assistance programs like the
Marshall Plan would lead to environmental devastation. In the United States, neo-Malthusian population control programs came to be seen as essential for addressing
Third World poverty and, by extension,
containing communism. Amidst this new overpopulation discourse, the United States began
Operation Bootstrap in Puerto Rico in 1945. The program's primary purpose was to industrialize the Puerto Rican economy by offering companies from the mainland United States incentives to establish manufacturing plants on the island. Another key aspect of the program was promoting population control measures. During this period, with support from United States, the Puerto Rican government opened 160 clinics and hospitals—all primarily for the purpose of providing sterilizations. By 1946, about 6.5% of all Puerto Rican women of childbearing age had been sterilized. The
Catholic Church opposed sterilization, with the bishop of San Juan arguing in 1947 that "the ostensible defenders of public health... have transgressed the limits of their competence and professional authority, pretending to resolve the economic problem of Puerto Rico [by] making it so there are fewer Puerto Ricans". While he worried about overpopulation,
Luis Muñoz Marín of the
Popular Democratic Party, who became
Governor of Puerto Rico in 1949, also opposed sterilization.
1950s By the 1950s, United States support for population control measures had grown even stronger. A number of birth clinics were established by The
Puerto Rican Family Welfare Association (also known as Pro Familia). Founded by feminist activists
Carmen Rivera de Alvarado and Celestina Zalduondo, Pro Familia was partially sponsored by
Planned Parenthood and the Sunnen Foundation, a philanthropic vehicle run by American businessman
Joseph Sunnen. Thousands of men and women were sterilized in Association clinics. In general, population control efforts focused on sterilization over other means of birth control, with many practitioners arguing that non-permanent methods placed too much responsibility on Puerto Rican women. Some believed that Puerto Rican women lacked the capacity for effective
bodily autonomy and self-determination. Others supported sterilization to support women's health and to alleviate poverty. Meanwhile, some women saw other birth control methods as dirty or immoral. Demographers argued that women sought out sterilization so they could seek employment in the newly industrialized economy without having to worry about raising children. By 1953, about 17% of Puerto Rican women of childbearing age had been sterilized.
1960s Under the
Kennedy administration, the United States announced its support for
family planning initiatives worldwide. After
Kennedy's assassination, President
Lyndon B. Johnson continued and expanded these initiatives. This expansion, which took place alongside Johnson's
Great Society campaign, was influenced by the idea of a "
culture of poverty", which was popularized by activist
Michael Harrington and sociologist
Oscar Lewis. Lewis argued that impoverished people shared certain traits that are passed from parents to their children. In his 1966 book
La Vida; A Puerto Rican Family in the Culture of Poverty, Lewis uses Puerto Rico as a case study to support this idea, arguing that the experiences of Puerto Rican women show that impoverished people are culturally unable to save money or delay gratification. Meanwhile, Operation Bootstrap transformed Puerto Rico's economy from one primarily based on agriculture to one primarily based on export-oriented manufacturing and industry. Jobs in agriculture were lost, and the industrial sector did not produce enough new jobs to make up for the shortfall. During the 1960s, many Puerto Ricans returned from the mainland United States to Puerto Rico due to adverse economic conditions. Puerto Rico also experienced a wave of immigration from Cuba and the Dominican Republic, and the social movements of the 1960s increased anxieties about youth radicalization. Amidst these changes, officials continued to argue that overpopulation was the root of Puerto Rico's problems. While the Catholic Church and its associated
Christian Action Party continued to oppose sterilization, as did the
Puerto Rican Independence and
Puerto Rican Socialist Parties, 34% of Puerto Rican women of childbearing age had been sterilized by 1965, the majority in their early twenties. During the late 1960s, the government made
tubal ligations available to Puerto Rican women at free or reduced cost. Many of these tubal ligations were performed under duress and without
informed consent. Social and economic factors, such as poverty, pressured Puerto Ricans to seek sterilizations. While most wealthy and middle-class Puerto Ricans preferred non-permanent birth control methods, others were unable to afford them. Tubal ligations were their only viable option. Many were also incorrectly told that future pregnancies would endanger their lives. In some cases, practitioners lied to women about the procedures they would undergo. They said they would tie the
fallopian tubes, a reversible procedure by itself, but actually cut them as well, an irreversible procedure. Hospitals often had policies mandating that doctors pressure women into receiving tubal ligations. In addition, because men were sometimes incorrectly told that
vasectomies were irreversible and would cause sexual dysfunction, they often pressured their wives to be sterilized instead.
1970s A number of studies and reports discussing the sterilization in Puerto Rico were released in the 1970s. One such study, commissioned by the
United States Department of Defense in 1971, argued that, because preventing births increased per capita output, sterilizations could result in a US$12.5 million windfall for the Puerto Rican economy. A report outlining Puerto Rico's population control strategy was released in 1973. This report, endorsed by Governor
Rafael Hernández Colón, called for birth control programs targeting "the groups with the least income and smallest amount of education". According to historian
Laura Briggs, sterilizations were sharply curtailed during the early 1970s due to increased scrutiny from the federal government. However, a 1975 report by a group of visiting American doctors indicated that the sterilization rate was actually increasing at this time, particularly in private hospitals. At the same time, opposition to coerced sterilizations was beginning to rise on the mainland. The
Young Lords, a left-wing Puerto Rican political organization active in the United States, argued that the sterilizations were a form of genocide. Members of the Committee to End Sterilization Abuse (CESA) and Committee for Abortion Rights and Against Sterilization Abuse (CARASA) also opposed the practice, with the CESA calling the perceived Puerto Rican sterilization campaigns "one of the most insidious U.S. population control programs in the Third World". General opposition to United States-backed family planning programs also rose among
American conservatives in the emerging
anti-abortion movement.
1980s By 1982, about 39% of Puerto Rican women of childbearing age were sterilized, with sterilization accounting for 58% of birth control methods used. The sterilization rate in Puerto Rico was much higher than in the mainland United States, with a 1985 report from
Population Today stating that Puerto Rico had "the highest rate of sterilization acceptance in the world". However, opposition to family planning accelerated under the
Reagan administration. Many members of Reagan's
New Right coalition supported curtailing abortion, sterilization, reproductive health services, and allegedly coercive practices employed by family planning programs. As part of the
Mexico City policy, the Reagan administration cut funding to several major population planning and reproductive health organizations in the mid-1980s. This policy remained in place throughout the Reagan and
Bush administrations. Despite this, private sector support for family planning programs increased substantially during this period.
1990s and decline in
Arecibo, Puerto Rico. After
Bill Clinton became president in 1993,
his administration rescinded the
Mexico City policy; worked to bring together environmentalists, population control advocates, and
reproductive rights advocates; and played a significant role in the 1994
International Conference on Population and Development in
Cairo. The program for this conference, released in February of that year, condemned coercive measures in family planning as a human rights violation and argued that coercion, demographic targets, and incentive systems were inappropriate for family planning. According to researcher Paige Whaley Eager, this represented a shift in the mainstream family planning movement towards a paradigm of reproductive rights and health. In Puerto Rico, opposition to sterilization rose as many young women began to favor other methods of contraception such as condoms, oral contraceptives, and
calendar-based contraceptive methods. Sterilization rates began to decline, dropping to 48% of birth control methods used by 1996. ==Legacy and historiography==