Disability, Evolution, Eugenics and Genomics

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Overview

Subject area

DSAB

Catalog Number

341

Course Title

Disability, Evolution, Eugenics and Genomics

Description

This course traces the history of Eugenics from the 1860`s to the present. Students will be introduced to the mid-19th-century science of improving the human race by the encouragement of marriage and childbearing by those considered to have - "desirable" traits and the segregation, sterilization or killing of those regarded as "unfit." The work of Charles Darwin will be studied, leading to the work of Darwin`s half-cousin Sir Francis Galton, who took Darwin`s theory in a new direction and coined the term Eugenics. Eugenic beliefs and practices, as expanded by others, chiefly in Britain and the United States, came to murderous fruition in Nazi Germany. After World War II, most thinkers regarded Eugenics as a "pseudo-science," and disability rights advocates saw any hint of Eugenics as fraught with dangers for persons with disabilities. Recently, advances in Genomics and the Human Genome Project appear to hold the promise of -designer babies' and a world free of many diseases and disabilities. As disability scholars, we must therefore explore the question: Could this mean a world free of persons with disabilities?

Typically Offered

Fall, Spring

Academic Career

Undergraduate

Liberal Arts

Yes

Credits

Minimum Units

3

Maximum Units

3

Academic Progress Units

3

Repeat For Credit

No

Components

Name

Lecture

Hours

3

Course Schedule