New Study Reveals Economic Drivers Behind The Sterilization of Black North Carolinians – WUNC

Between 1929 and 1974, North Carolina officials sterilized an estimated 7,600 people, many by force or coercion. The states eugenics program targeted people deemed feebleminded, sick or living with a disability.

Host Anita Rao discusses how and why the North Carolina Eugenics Board targeted poor Black people in its more than 40-year-long program with University of New Orleans professor Gregory Price and attorney Valerie Johnson of Johnson and Groninger, PLLC.

A recent study finds that it also targeted Black people considered economically unproductive in society. University of New Orleans professor Gregory Price led the research with co-authors William Sandy Darity, Samuel DuBois Cook Distinguished Professor of Public Policy at Duke University, and Rhonda Sharpe, founder and president of the Womens Institute for Science, Equity and Race.

The scholars found that for Black populations in North Carolina counties in a 10-year period, the number of sterilizations increased with the number of people who were unemployed and supported by the county budget. For other racial groups, the researchers found no correlation between sterilizations and county-supported individuals, which backs their claim that the racial bias of the North Carolina Eugenics Board program had economic motivations.

Host Anita Rao speaks with Price about the study and its implications. She also talks with Valerie Johnson, a Durham-based attorney for Johnson & Groninger PLLC, who helped sterilization survivors file claims for compensation from the state.

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New Study Reveals Economic Drivers Behind The Sterilization of Black North Carolinians - WUNC

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