Nurturing the citizens of the future: milk stations and child nutrition in Puerto Rico, 1929-60

Medical History
Elisa M González

Abstract

Between the 1930s and 1960s Puerto Rico was transformed from a marginal United States territory into an industrialised 'showcase of development'. This article investigates the organisation of milk station programmes on the island during this crucial period and how these reflected the circulation of child welfare knowledge, nutrition expertise and public health practices. During the Depression, these perspectives fostered a recast of the eugenic regeneration ideologies motivating medical assessments of and sanitary interventions with Puerto Rico's rural poor since the nineteenth century. Innovations in nutrition knowledge and an emerging rural hygiene movement highlighted the negative health effects of the island's monocrops economy. In this context, the nourishment of children's bodies assumed symbolic and instrumental significance for the reconfiguration of colonial and developmental models promoted by the new Popular Democratic Party (PPD). The experience of public health professionals in relief work during the 1930s contributed to the articulation of food and nutrition as key elements of this party's populist discourse. Programmes like milk stations became part of strategies to rear and manage the labour force needed in the ...Continue Reading

References

Jul 1, 1989·Brain and Language·R RodríguezG González
Nov 1, 1996·Nuclear Medicine and Biology·Q H Zheng, G K Mulholland
Oct 4, 2002·Current Biology : CB·Colin Watts
Mar 26, 2003·Seminars in Respiratory Infections·Rafael L PerezJesse Roman
Oct 3, 2007·The American Historical Review·Nick Cullather
Dec 1, 1931·American Journal of Public Health and the Nation's Health
Apr 3, 2009·Medicina clínica·Virginia Martínez MarínGumersindo Pérez Manga
Jan 1, 1946·The Proceedings of the Nutrition Society·P S SELWYN-CLARKE, J BENNET
Jan 1, 1946·The Proceedings of the Nutrition Society·B S PLATT, R A WEBB

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