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Engaging in sex, becoming parents, raising children: these are
among the most personal decisions we make, and for people with
mental retardation, these decisions are consistently challenged,
regulated, and outlawed. This book is a comprehensive study of the
American legal doctrines and social policies, past and present,
that have governed procreation and parenting by persons with mental
retardation. It argues persuasively that people with retardation
should have legal authority to make their own decisions. Despite
the progress of the normalization movement, which has moved so many
people with mental retardation into the mainstream since the 1960s,
negative myths about reproduction and child rearing among this
population persist. Martha Field and Valerie Sanchez trace these
prejudices to the eugenics movement of the late nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries. They show how misperceptions have led to
inconsistent and discriminatory outcomes when third parties seek to
make birth control or parenting decisions for people with mental
retardation. They also explore the effect of these decisions on
those they purport to protect. Detailed, thorough, and just, their
book is a sustained argument for reform of the legal practices and
social policies it describes.
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