Abstract
Scholarship on Alberta's Sexual Sterilization Act (1928-1972) has focused on the high-level politics behind the legislation, its main administrative body, the Eugenics Board, and its legal legacy, overlooking the largely female-dominated professions that were responsible for operating the program outside of the provincial mental health institutions. This paper investigates the relationship between eugenics and the professions of teaching, public health nursing, and social work. It argues that the Canadian mental hygiene and eugenics movements, which were fundamentally connected, provided these professions with an opportunity to maintain and extend their professional authority.
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CITATION STYLE
Samson, A. (2014). Eugenics in the community: gendered professions and eugenic sterilization in Alberta, 1928-1972. Canadian Bulletin of Medical History = Bulletin Canadien d’histoire de La Médecine, 31(1), 143–163. https://doi.org/10.3138/cbmh.31.1.143
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