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      Nurturing the Citizens of the Future: Milk Stations and Child Nutrition in Puerto Rico, 1929–60

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          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 industrial development model promoted by the PPD. From the perspective of poor Puerto Ricans, however, they were part of the materialisation of its promise of social justice for the poorer classes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Med Hist
          Med Hist
          MDH
          Medical History
          Cambridge University Press (Cambridge, UK )
          0025-7273
          2048-8343
          April 2015
          : 59
          : 2
          : 177-198
          Affiliations
          Center for the History and Ethics of Public Health, Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University, 722 W. 168th Street, 9th Floor, New York, NY 10032, USA
          Author notes

          I would like to thank the faculty and staff at the Center for the History and Ethics of Public Health at Columbia University for their support, especially Kavita Sivaramakrishnan, David Rosner, and NiTanya Nedd. The guidance received from Ismael García-Colón, Blanca Silvestrini, José Rigau, and Medical History’s anonymous reviewers was also crucial for the completion of this manuscript.

          [* ]Email address for correspondence: emg2173@ 123456columbia.edu
          Article
          00005 S0025727315000058
          10.1017/mdh.2015.5
          4407449
          25766539
          d0d10560-eac6-49f3-92d4-777e7290fefa
          © The Author 2015
          History
          Page count
          References: 125, Pages: 22
          Categories
          Articles

          History
          history of public health,history of nutrition,medical history of puerto rico,child welfare

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