medicalization of murder: the 'Euthanasia' programs
TítuloThe medicalization of murder: the 'Euthanasia' programs
Autor
Call number179.7/0017
Número del objeto09356e
Lugar de publicaciónNew York, New York, United States
EditorialRoutledge
Año de publicación
2014
Paginaciónpp71-104
MaterialArticle
SerieRoutledge studies in modern European history ; 20
ISBN9780415896658
NotesArticle from the book 'Nurses and midwives in Nazi Germany: the "Euthanasia Programs"pp71-104
Descripción
At the beginning of the Nazi era, Hitler's sinister racial theories were swung into place. This included compulsory sterilization of those considered genetically unfit to procreate. Simply stopping the reproduction of people with mental and/or physical disabilities was not sufficient to achieve the German goal of a "pure Aryan race". The focus soon shifted to eliminating the people themselves, including children born with physical or developmental conditions. Involuntary sterilisation evolved into systematic killing, which was termed "euthanasia"