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Predictive puericulture in Argentina: The Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social and the reproduction of Latin eugenics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2023

Alexa Hagerty*
Affiliation:
Minderoo Centre for Technology and Democracy, University of Cambridge, UK
Florencia Aranda
Affiliation:
Independent Researcher and Activist, Argentina
Diego Jemio
Affiliation:
Independent Researcher and Journalist, Argentina
*
Corresponding author: Alexa Hagerty, Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

In April 2018, as the Argentine Congress debated decriminalizing abortion, local media revealed that public-health officials in a northern province had deployed an algorithmic system to predict teenage pregnancy. Public response to the technology quickly became entangled in society-wide debates about reproductive rights. Both proponents and detractors of the algorithmic system framed the technology as novel and cutting-edge. However, this paper argues for an analysis of the system not as a form of innovation or rupture but as a continuation of historical forms of biopolitical governance in Argentina, particularly puericultura, a eugenic theory of child rearing.

Resumen

Resumen

En abril de 2018, mientras el Congreso argentino debatía la despenalización del aborto, los medios periodísticos locales revelaron que funcionarios de salud pública de una provincia del norte, habían desplegado un sistema algorítmico para predecir el embarazo adolescente. La respuesta pública a la tecnología se enlazó rápidamente a los debates sociales sobre derechos reproductivos. Tanto los defensores como los detractores del sistema algorítmico lo catalogaron como innovador y de vanguardia. Sin embargo, este artículo sostiene un análisis del sistema no como un modo de innovación o ruptura, sino en tanto continuación de las formas históricas de gobernanza biopolítica en Argentina; en particular la puericultura, una teoría eugenésica de la crianza de los hijos.

Type
Research Article
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Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of British Society for the History of Science

This paper traces affinities and continuities between Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social, a predictive platform for adolescent pregnancy deployed in Salta Argentina, and puericultura, a eugenic theory of child rearing focused on mothers advanced by Argentine physicians and public health officials in the early twentieth century.Footnote 1 As a form of ‘Latin eugenics’, puericultura synthesized neo-Lamarckian eugenic theories, Catholicism and public health, precipitating intensive state surveillance of the lives and bodies of women and girls.Footnote 2 Like other public-health movements, puericultura acted both as biopolitical governance of the population and as a disciplinary form of power over individual bodies.Footnote 3

Scholars of emerging technologies have documented continuities between algorithmic harms and historical forms of exclusion. Virginia Eubanks coins the term ‘digital poorhouse’ to describe similarities between punitive treatment of the poor in the nineteenth century and contemporary forms of algorithmic surveillance.Footnote 4 Safiya Noble argues that ‘technological redlining’ acts to systematically exclude communities of colour in ways analogous to and contiguous with discriminatory financial practices that intentionally segregated American cities in the twentieth century.Footnote 5 Ruha Benjamin presents the concept of the ‘New Jim Code’ to describe how algorithmic technologies continue to encode white supremacy and deepen social inequity.Footnote 6 In each of these cases, the connections between historical exclusions and contemporary harms are not neatly causal, yet nor are they merely metaphorical. Instead, they speak to material links, affinities, intertextualities and continuities of socio-technical imaginaries – those ‘visions of desirable futures, animated by shared understanding of forms of social life and social order attainable through, and supportive of, advances in science and technology’.Footnote 7

Discussions of ‘AI ethics’ are often presented in universalizing terms while in fact narrowly reflecting ideas and experiences of the global North.Footnote 8 Technologies do not travel seamlessly, nor are they ‘imported magic’.Footnote 9 Research that attends to technologies as they are specifically located in distinct societies is crucial.Footnote 10 This paper contributes to the study of AI technologies in the global South – in full acknowledgement of ‘the South as a composite, plural entity’.Footnote 11 Like many other technologies, the predictive system considered here was developed between international and local actors: as Paola Ricaurte notes, we must recognize how ‘multiple dimensions of colonization are interwoven and deployed as an internal, international, and transnational process’.Footnote 12 The Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social shares features with other AI systems, both in its technological design and in its social harms, but it is also uniquely situated in an Argentine socio-historical context, from which it (in part) emerges, contributes and interplays, as we explore in this paper.

Central to our analysis are questions of reproduction: biological reproduction as a wellspring of imaginaries about human destiny and as a site of political and technological intervention; the social reproduction of eugenic ideologies and practices, especially those emerging from ‘Latin eugenics’; and the ways in which ‘new’ technologies act to reproduce and reinforce historical forms of social organization and geographies of power.

Technology unveiled

The Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social was unveiled on 20 March 2018 at the Microsoft Data & AI Experience event in Buenos Aires. There, the US technology giant and the Ministry of Early Childhood (Ministerio de la Primera Infancia) of the province of Salta in northern Argentina announced a collaboration to apply artificial intelligence to public policies, specifically by designing systems to predict school dropouts and teenage pregnancy, the latter being the focus of this paper. At the event, tech executives and politicians highlighted the technology's novelty. The Microsoft spokesperson announced, ‘These are pioneering cases of the use of AI data by public, private and third-sector organizations’.Footnote 13 The then governor of Salta, Juan Manuel Urtubey, said, ‘We must dare to change and do something different’.Footnote 14 In subsequent interviews Urtubey continued to emphasize innovation, remarking to a journalist, ‘Twenty years ago, talking about this would have been pure science fiction. Today it is just having the good sense to use the technological tools we have at our disposal’.Footnote 15 Thus, from its launch, the system was framed as at once rational, innovative and futuristic.

The system did not come to broader public attention until Governor Urtubey visited a popular television programme, El diario de Mariana, on 11 April 2018, where he claimed, ‘With technology you can foresee five or six years in advance, with first name, last name and address, which girls are 86 per cent predestined to have a teenage pregnancy’.Footnote 16 Urtubey's remarks aired the same week that the National Congress of Argentina began historic hearings on the country's highly restrictive abortion laws, through consideration of the Voluntary Interruption of Pregnancy Law (IVE, in its Spanish acronym). As governor, Urtubey publicly opposed the legalization of abortion and the media immediately connected his enthusiasm for the predictive system to the debate about reproductive rights. In fact, as Urtubey appeared on El diario de Mariana, the programme simultaneously broadcast live coverage of protests in support of abortion rights. Urtubey and the protestors appeared on a split screen, above a red banner declaring ‘fierce debate in Congress over the decriminalization of abortion’, literally juxtaposing the discussion of the predictive platform and the abortion debate.

The abortion debate figured in the development and reception of the predictive system in other ways as well. In July 2018, paediatrician Abel Albino gave public remarks against abortion rights in the IVE hearings. Albino is the founder of a non-profit to alleviate childhood malnutrition, the Fundación CONIN, which was one of three civil society groups involved in implementing the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social, discussed in detail later in the article. In his testimony, Albino did not discuss cutting-edge technologies or make futuristic claims. Rather, his speech looked to the past, referencing historical tropes of Argentina as a vast and underpopulated territory:

Our country is enormously large, enormously rich and dangerously empty. And we're going to kill kids when we need kids? A pregnant woman is a treasure to the country and her child is a jewel … We need people … We have 10 times the territory of Italy and half the population of Italy … Sarmiento told us ‘it is an empty country’.Footnote 17

In citing Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (1811–88), an influential liberal politician and the second president of Argentina, Albino linked the contemporary abortion debate to historical discourses of underpopulation which once justified eugenic-inflected projects of European immigration.

Albino's testimony, oriented to the past, and Urtubey's comments, directed toward the future, concatenate nineteenth-century discourses on population and governance, twenty-first-century struggles for reproductive rights, and the vanishing horizon of innovation promised by the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social. In the next section, we parse the implications of this nexus by examining public scrutiny and reception of the Plataforma.

Journalistic investigations

In the days immediately following Urtubey's appearance on El diario de Mariana, journalists began investigating the technology.Footnote 18 News reports publicized that the Ministry of Early Childhood in Salta had collected data from girls and young women between the ages of ten and nineteen, and that information from boys and men had not been sought. The data set contained the following information on individuals: age, ethnicity, country of origin, disability status, number of people in the household, whether the household had hot water in the bathroom, neighbourhood/area, whether the girl or young woman was currently or had previously been pregnant, and whether the head of household dropped out of school. Journalists reported that no information regarding contraception, sex education, abortion or sexual violence appeared to have been collected, claims eventually confirmed by technical reviews of the system.Footnote 19

Journalists also revealed that several of the civil society organizations involved in the development of the system had strong ties to the Catholic Church. The collaborating organizations were named as the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF); Un Techo para mi pais, a Chilean housing non-profit founded by a Jesuit priest; and the Fundación CONIN, founded by aforementioned Abel Albino, a Catholic activist and member of Opus Dei.Footnote 20

Media reports highlighted privacy and surveillance concerns; one headline declared ‘Details of the deal between Urtubey and Microsoft to spy on salteños’ (referring to residents of Salta).Footnote 21 Journalists also uncovered that the system had been shared with other Argentine provinces and with Colombia, with plans to deploy it in the ‘most vulnerable areas’ of that country.Footnote 22

Feminist activists, already in high gear for the abortion debate, reacted quickly and critically to the system. An open letter entitled ‘¿Inteligencia artificial o artificios patriarcales?’ (Artificial intelligence or patriarchal artifact?) dismissed the system as dangerously inadequate to address the complex socio-economic factors involved in adolescent pregnancy.Footnote 23 The title itself offered a critique in the form of wordplay. In Spanish, the term artificios can be used to convey a neutral meaning of ‘artefact’ or ‘device’, but also a derogatory sense of ‘trick’ or ‘scam’.

Machine-learning specialists analysed the system. The Laboratorio de Inteligencia Artificial Aplicada de la Facultad de Ciencias Exactas de la Universidad de Buenos Aires (LIAA) issued a report in July 2018 detailing flaws, including biased data, reuse of training set as evaluation data, and data which were fundamentally inadequate to answer the question whether an adolescent would have a pregnancy in the future.Footnote 24 The report did not consider social context or political debates, but explicitly connected the system's flaws to political outcomes, stating, ‘methodological problems and unreliable data pose the risk of leading policy makers to take incorrect actions’, concluding that ‘this case is an example of the dangers of using computer output as revealed truth’.Footnote 25

The World Wide Web Foundation published a report in September 2018, drawing on LIAA findings and interviews with representatives from Salta's Ministry of Early Childhood.Footnote 26 The report detailed that Microsoft supplies the basic technology and that the ‘data is hosted on a server outside Argentina but, according to ministerial authorities, the data is hosted in accordance with the relevant laws’.Footnote 27 It stated that data were collected on a system which ‘allows for coordination between ministries, civil society organizations, and Microsoft’.Footnote 28 The report urged the Ministry of Early Childhood to (1) publish a technical report, (2) document the impact of the system and (3) explain its theoretical framework– that is, how the model is hypothesized to relate to the social problem of adolescent pregnancy.Footnote 29 The Ministry of Early Childhood did not implement these suggestions.

Desirable futures

Any attempt to assess the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social is impeded by the gaps in publicly available information regarding its design and outcomes. As the World Wide Web Foundation report describes, ‘the implementation had transparent stages and opaque ones’.Footnote 30 Yet opaque material can reveal shapes and forms, as through frosted glass, even as details remain inscrutable. Through a close reading of media interviews with officials and by contextualizing the system within Argentine sociopolitical and historical contexts, we hope to move toward a fuller understanding of how its creators understood the relationship between the model and the issue of teenage pregnancies.Footnote 31

The system was deployed in Salta, a rural province. Bordered by Bolivia and Paraguay, Salta has a significant population of immigrants from these countries and is home to one of the largest Indigenous populations in Argentina, primarily Wichí, Kolla and Guaraní communities. In the province, 45.5 per cent of the population live in poverty and 6.7 per cent in extreme poverty.Footnote 32 Rates of adolescent pregnancy and maternal mortality are high in the province.Footnote 33

In an interview about the predictive system with researchers from the World Wide Web Foundation, Pablo Abeleira, technology coordinator at the Ministry of Early Childhood of Salta, said, ‘the tools mainly rely on data collected in low-income areas of the south-eastern, eastern and western districts of the city of Salta in the years 2016 and 2017’.Footnote 34 In other media interviews, Abeleira indicates that the system is also deployed outside the city of Salta, in rural areas of the province. In an undated interview with press site El Efete, Pablo Abeleira and the provincial minister of early childhood, Carlos Abeleira (his brother), described the data collection process in detail: information is obtained by ‘territorial agents’ who visit communities to carry out personal interviews and record GPS positions. The data are audited by ‘competent personnel’ who review photographs, videos and audio recordings digitized on mobile phones, computers or tablets. The system has three primary goals: monitoring individual cases, developing personalized plans to address problems such childhood undernutrition, and sharing data with other unspecified actors.Footnote 35 Describing the location in the province where data weere being collected at the time of the interview, Carlos Abeleira said it is an area ‘112 times bigger than the city of Buenos Aires with only 35,000 people living there, most of them Wichis, the most fragile ethnic group living in the province’.Footnote 36 Wichís are an Indigenous community of about 50,000 people, living in several northern provinces of Argentina and in Bolivia, where they are engaged in struggles for land rights due to territorial dispossession for large-scale cattle ranching and soybean agriculture.Footnote 37

The journalist conducting the interview described a demonstration of the system:

Clicking again on a house opens a spreadsheet with data on the babies, children and pregnant women living there, which contains a series of social indicators that the ministry developed together with UNICEF and various social organizations …

At random, Abeleira opens a window where a 16-year-old pregnant teenager appears, showing her health, educational and sanitary background, the medical treatments she has undergone and those pending, her schooling, the levels of risk of those she lives with, characteristics of the house she lives in, the water she drinks, the family composition to determine if there is overcrowding, and much more.Footnote 38

This description gives a sense of the fine-grained, intimate surveillance the system is designed to carry out. It complements the World Wide Web Foundation report (2018) which provides clues to the system's practices of public-health surveillance, architecture and data sharing. In a footnote, the report states that ‘CONIN and TECHO are the most noteworthy of the participating organizations’; furthermore:

The system is supported by an app that standardizes the information collected by several organizations operating in the territory. While each organization is given exclusive access to the databases each has compiled, the government has access to all the data.Footnote 39

The footnote includes a link to a 2016 video posted on the YouTube channel of the Ministry of Early Childhood.Footnote 40 The video, which is in English, promotes a public-health system developed by Microsoft and CONIN. It states that a Microsoft philanthropy Azure grant funded the creation of a digital system which contains information on individuals and identifies families at risk. The video narrates the story of Marta and her son Bryan, who has trisomy 21 and renal disease. The narrator says, ‘In fact Marta never asked CONIN for help with Bryan. The Microsoft solution analysed her son's data and produced an alert’. In an interview in the video, Pablo Abeleira explains that the system instantly shares data: ‘that way we can work not only with people from the government, but also with priests, police, teachers and tribal leaders, in certain places’.Footnote 41

It is not clear whether the Microsoft–CONIN system discussed in the video has a direct connection with the pregnancy prediction platform (pregnancy is not mentioned in the video, although one frame shows an icon of a pregnant woman in the open app). However, the video reveals a high degree of coordination and data sharing between CONIN, the government of Salta and other parties that is enabled by Microsoft platforms and funding. It also presents information on how CONIN collects data from families, with footage of CONIN staff dressed in orange vests walking through neighbourhoods, sitting at kitchen tables entering information into tablets, and measuring children's heads. Whether or not the ‘territorial agents’ described by Abeleira as responsible for collecting data for the teenage pregnancy system are CONIN staff remains an open question. However, the video provides a scenario for how data collection and surveillance may be carried out for the predictive system.

Salta, where the platform was developed and initially deployed, is among the most conservative and Catholic parts of the country and has played a significant role in national debates about reproductive rights. Until 2018 Salta was the only Argentine province that taught religious education in public and private schools and did not provide comprehensive sex education despite a 2007 national law requiring its inclusion in school curriculums. The province came to national attention in May 2018 due to a legal case in which a ten-year-old girl who had been raped by her stepfather faced obstacles to obtaining an abortion. Although a 1921 national law permitted the legal termination of pregnancy in cases of rape or danger to the life of the mother, a more restrictive provincial law passed in 2012 limited these exceptions. National uproar over the case forced Governor Urtubey to repeal the 2012 law. More recently, the first lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of Argentina's 2020 law legalizing abortion was filed in Salta province's federal court.

Representatives of organizations involved in the development of the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social have made public statements against the legalization of abortion. As previously mentioned, then governor Urtubey opposed the IVE law. Carlos Abeleira publicly expressed personal opposition to the legalization of abortion and in a 2019 interview he stated that the Ministry of Early Childhood ‘defends children from their conception’.Footnote 42

Arguably what most securely links the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social to the abortion debate is the involvement of CONIN, whose founder, physician Abel Albino, has long been a vociferous public opponent to the legalization of abortion, as well as to sex education in schools and the use of contraceptives.Footnote 43 Albino is a polarizing figure. He is widely respected for his work on childhood malnutrition. He is also known for controversial claims like denying that condoms protect from HIV, positions analysed in greater detail in the next section.Footnote 44

In an astute analysis of the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social that brought the technology to the attention of the anglophone public, Paz Peña and Joana Varon write,

The idea that algorithms can predict teenage pregnancy before it happens is the perfect excuse for anti-women and anti-sexual and reproductive rights activists to declare abortion laws unnecessary. According to their narratives, if they have enough information from poor families, conservative public policies can be deployed to predict and avoid abortions by poor women.Footnote 45

In other words, Peña and Varon understand the technology as designed with an explicit ideological motivation to counter the passage of the IVE law.

In this section of the paper, we have offered a close reading of media interviews to build a fuller picture of the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social. We can surmise that its intellectual architects oppose the legalization of abortion and that it is designed to closely monitor individual women and girls (and not men and boys). The technology has been used to track women and girls in Indigenous communities; that is, historically marginalized groups already subjected to heightened state surveillance, control and violence. We also know that the sensitive data collected are shared with a number of actors, which may include ‘priests, police, teachers and tribal leaders’, as documented in another collaboration between CONIN, the Ministerio de la Primera Infancia, and Microsoft.Footnote 46

Puericulture

To delve further into the sociotechnical imaginary of the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social, we next examine historical forms of reproductive control in Argentina, particularly puericultura, an offshoot of eugenics focused on mothers and children.

Historians have traced two influential schools of eugenic thought: ‘Anglo-Saxon’ eugenics, theorized and practised in Germany, the United States and Scandinavia, and the ‘Latin’ eugenics of Argentina, Chile, Mexico and Brazil. Anglo-Saxon eugenics emphasized biological determinism and heredity and deployed direct interventions on the body such as sterilization and genocide (‘negative eugenics’). Latin eugenics emphasized the role of the environment and implemented public-health campaigns and marriage restrictions (‘positive eugenics’).Footnote 47

Latin eugenics was not homogeneous; a rich body of scholarship documents its myriad forms and local manifestations.Footnote 48 However, it tended to unite Catholicism, neo-Lamarckism, a rejection of sterilization and a critique of rigid European theories of racial superiority.Footnote 49 Latin eugenicists ‘sought to enhance the race through the promotion of maternal and child care, and were, generally speaking, pro-natalist. Thus fertility, reproduction, and sex were a central concern’.Footnote 50

Distinctions between ‘Latin’ and ‘Anglo-Saxon’ eugenics were not absolute. There was considerable exchange between practitioners: in the 1930s, Argentine eugenicists travelled to Germany for training and well-known European and American eugenicists published in Argentine scientific journals.Footnote 51 ‘Latin’ and ‘Anglo-Saxon’ approaches shared a ‘technocratic and authoritarian ideology’ that legitimized nearly unlimited intervention in private lives in the name of improving the health of future generations.Footnote 52

Historian Marisa Miranda theorizes a ‘conceptual viscosity of eugenics’ – the propensity of eugenic discourses and practices to shapeshift and adapt to changing scientific paradigms and political circumstances.Footnote 53 Eugenics ‘infiltrates, adapts, but is also impossible to seize, since it slithers away when one tries to pin it down’.Footnote 54 In Argentina, eugenic thought was engaged across the political spectrum: liberal and conservative, socialist and anarchist, nationalist and fascist, Peronist and anti-Peronist.Footnote 55 It was informed by convergences and tensions between liberalism and Catholicism, as well as by political and scientific relationships with Europe, the United States and other Latin American countries.Footnote 56

Argentine eugenics was noteworthy for its preoccupation with underpopulation and its emphasis on motherhood: ‘the mother and, by extension, child care became the principal object of eugenics, and maternity and infancy institutes its main center of action’.Footnote 57 Argentine eugenicists embraced puericultura, a style of eugenics first popularized by Parisian physician Adolphe Pinard, who, concerned by declining French birth rates, fused ideas of ‘scientific motherhood’ and neo-Lamarkian notions of heredity – that is, the transmission of acquired characteristics from parent to child. Puericulture was not distinct from eugenics so much as a maternalist variation, a difference of ‘form not substance’.Footnote 58 Eugenics and puericultura ‘regularly appeared as twinned terms and acted in mutually reinforcing ways’.Footnote 59

In Argentina, as in France, puericultura was fuelled by worries of underpopulation and declining birth rates and entangled in efforts to encourage an increase in the quantity and ‘quality’ of the population. Alexandra Minna Stern observes, ‘emphasis on puericultura was directly tied to pronatalism and panic over the need to populate both urban areas and vast expanses of land with the right kind of human stock’.Footnote 60 In Argentina, conceptions of a vast country in need of people were as old as the nation itself and integral to the national project.

‘To govern is to populate’

Argentine liberal reformer Juan Bautista Alberdi (1810–84) famously said that ‘to govern is to populate’. Conceiving of immigration as a civilizing mission, he wrote, ‘Europe will bring us its fresh spirit, its work habits, and its civilized ways with the immigrants it sends us … This is the only way that our America, uninhabited today, will become prosperous in a short time’.Footnote 61

The notion of Argentina as ‘uninhabited’ informed interlocking movements that shaped the nation: the genocide of Indigenous communities and aggressive policies to attract European immigration. As liberal reformers like Alberdi and Domingo Faustino Sarmiento saw it, the country's interior, having been cleared of its Indigenous and mestizo inhabitants, would be settled by European immigrants who would propel the agricultural economy.Footnote 62

A series of military occupations sought to exterminate Indigenous societies through genocide and forced migration.Footnote 63 During the ‘Conquest of the Desert’ (1878–85), Sarmiento wrote that ‘the occupation of such an extensive region must present many difficulties, but none of them compare with the advantages to be gained from the extinction of the savage tribes’.Footnote 64 The term ‘desert’ in this context is not a description of an arid landscape but the ‘absence of state control, capitalism, and civilization’ and a justification for settler colonialism, as Gastón Gordillo and Silvia Hirsch write.Footnote 65

Drawing on the same tropes of the unpopulated ‘desert’, liberal leaders launched aggressive policies of immigration rooted in eugenic ideologies of racial hierarchy and guided by an explicit policy of blanquismo, ‘whitening’ the population.Footnote 66 Between 1871 and 1914 six million immigrants arrived in Argentina, most from Europe.Footnote 67 In 1895, immigrants accounted for two-thirds of the population in the capital.Footnote 68 However, contrary to liberal leaders’ intentions, rather than being ‘Nordic’ and ‘Anglo-Saxon’ people, immigrants to Argentina were largely from Italy, Spain and Jewish communities in Eastern Europe.Footnote 69 Rather than settling in the agricultural heart of the country, immigrants stayed in Buenos Aires.Footnote 70 Rather than working as low-wage labourers, immigrants brought radical ideas about labour, and soon organized a powerful anarchist movement, which fomented collective action and introduced ideas about women's equality that threatened Catholic norms.Footnote 71

The same eugenic ideas that originally justified immigration soon framed immigrants as diseased, degenerate and criminal. While some Argentine politicians called for immigrants to be deported, the general thrust of government policy was to monitor, control and rehabilitate the immigrant.Footnote 72 Public-health reformer Jose Maria Ramos Mejía wrote at the turn of the twentieth century that the first generation of immigrants ‘is often deformed and not good-looking … [because] his morphology has not been modified by the chisel of culture. In the second, one can already see the corrections that civilization begins to imprint’.Footnote 73 The neo-Lamarckian underpinnings of eugenic thought in Argentina, which held the possibility of bettering the population through environmental factors, authorized a vast expansion of science and medicine into private life.Footnote 74 Innovative and often intimate forms of surveillance multiplied. A police official in the city of La Plata, Juan Vucetich, developed fingerprinting techniques in the late 1880s, and this biometric technology was widely applied to Argentina's population.Footnote 75 From the 1880s to the 1950s, doctors, psychiatrists and medical social workers called higienistas monitored Argentina's physical and moral health.Footnote 76 These efforts reached far beyond hospitals and clinics; for example, in the late nineteenth century, state social workers inspected private homes, particularly overcrowded tenements called conventillos, where cooking implements, sleeping arrangements and bodies were searched for signs of disease.Footnote 77 Women's bodies were particularly scrutinized. Sex workers were subject to medical examination without consent.Footnote 78 Laundry workers and wet nurses were checked for signs of disease which might be transmitted to wealthy families through linens and milk.Footnote 79

Motherhood attracted intense attention propelled by puericultural ideas that a mother's physical and moral health was inherited by her children, as Yolanda Eraso and other historians have traced.Footnote 80 By managing motherhood, the nation's stock could be safeguarded from ills including epilepsy, homosexuality, alcoholism, criminality, debauchery and suicide.Footnote 81 Projects like childrens’ health booklets and maternal health records abounded. For example, in 1934 ‘eugenic fertility records’ were proposed to record women's ‘race, color and religion’, track fertility and educate about maternal duties.Footnote 82 As late as 1947, official eugenic registries were proposed to prevent ‘undesirable’ marriages.Footnote 83 Ambitious programmes to create biotypological registries of ‘physical, psychological, moral and intellectual traits’ were freqently proposed, albeit only sporadically carried out.Footnote 84 By the late 1930s, puericultura had influenced maternalist policies at the national level, through measures designed to raise birth rates and ensure pre- and postnatal care of mothers and children under strict medical supervision.Footnote 85 The welfare state elaborated under Perón integrated earlier puericultura policies and forged new maternalist protections.Footnote 86

Eugenic institutions endured until the end of the twentieth century. The Argentine Eugenics Society was founded in 1945, established a school of eugenics in 1957 and held its last conference in 1970.Footnote 87 As the century progressed, Argentine eugenics increasingly merged with Catholicism until, as Miranda analyses, ‘the prototype of a eugenic family became indistinguishable from the religious family’.Footnote 88 Even as eugenics faded as a recognizable scientific field, its viscous and dendritic impulses continued in new forms. The staunchly Catholic military dictatorship of 1976–83, with its credo of ‘faith, family and the fatherland’, had a ‘eugenic slant’.Footnote 89 The juntas imposed pronatalist policies prohibiting contraception and abortion.Footnote 90 Death squads kidnapped and imprisoned pregnant women considered to be ‘subversives’, killing them after they'd given birth so that their infants could be appropriated by families allied with the military. The children of ‘subversives’ were considered ‘seeds of the tree of evil’ who could nevertheless be redeemed through the positive environment of traditional Catholic homes.Footnote 91 As anthropologist Lindsay Smith notes, this approach ‘fits within a larger eugenic history in Argentina’.Footnote 92

In attenuated forms, the logics of puericulture continue to be found in contemporary public-health discourses and practices in Argentina. Anthropologist Ana María Pérez Declercq researches reproductive healthcare in Salta, and offers an ethnographic tracing of how the bodies of poor pregnant women are targeted for intensive state surveillance and control, justified by moralizing discourses elided into scientific evidence.Footnote 93 Pérez Declercq examines how political rhetoric about poor women's ‘inability to plan a family’ works to blame women for their own economic precarity while also framing them as responsible for national economic crises. This logic justifies intensive surveillance of women's reproductive lives and, at its most extreme, leads to forced sterilizations (as documented in Mexico and Peru).Footnote 94

Argentine sociologist Camila Paula Stimbaum's ethnographic study of one of CONIN's centres found that the foundation intensively focuses on the responsibility of the mother as ‘caregiver, nurturer and educator’.Footnote 95 Stimbaum pointedly draws on the historical language of liberal population governance to argue that the foundation frames its work as a ‘civilizing mission’.Footnote 96 Postulating a division ‘between maternities considered appropriate, adequate and/or desirable and those that do not meet this standard’, the foundation pushes women to ‘to govern themselves, in order to then be able to govern their own families’.Footnote 97

From the earliest days of the Argentine state, the bodies of poor women have been conceptualized as both threat and promise. They threaten the reproduction of poverty, criminality and ‘subversive’ elements. Yet, if surveilled, controlled and subject to the ‘chisel of culture’, they can populate the ‘desert’ of a settler colonial country with an economically productive labour force.

Dangerously empty

Abel Albino's testimony at the IVE hearings in July 2018, discussed in the opening of this article, clearly invoked the ‘desert’ tropes of the nineteenth century when he said, ‘Our country is enormously large, enormously rich and dangerously empty’.Footnote 98 Albino developed this argument in his 2012 book To Govern Is to Populate: Anthropological and Ethical Guidelines for Sound Sex Education. The title is a direct citation of Alberdi's famous line, highlighting its centrality to Albino's ideology.Footnote 99 The book merges nationalist concerns about population with calls for physiological and moral control and social improvement. Notably, Albino links malnutrition to uncontrolled sexuality, writing, ‘Infantile malnutrition is a cultural disease typical of places where the sexual act … is carried out compulsively, with uncontrolled and irrational passion’.Footnote 100 In another passage, he writes that in families where children are malnourished, ‘there are a series of behaviours that inevitably must be combated: immodesty, promiscuity, pornography, masturbation, incest, unnatural sex, rape, paedophilia, contraception, abortion, infidelity, common-law unions’.Footnote 101

In his books, articles and media interviews, Albino elaborates his thesis that contraception and abortion are undesirable because Argentina needs to be populated.Footnote 102 ‘Limiting conception in our country is a form of suicide. It's an empty country … We need people and people of quality’.Footnote 103 He argues that sex education and government programmes that provide condoms lead to promiscuity. This, in turn, leads to child abandonment and malnutrition, which causes physiological harm, namely, in Albino's view, the failure of normal brain growth and stunted intellectual ability. Albino writes that children with ‘damaged brains’ are not the healthy and moral citizens needed to populate the country.Footnote 104

Through his preoccupation with underpopulation, his direct invocation of Alberdi and his rhetoric linking physical and moral ills, Albino's discourses share affinities and intertextualities with those of early twentieth-century puericultura. In CONIN's attention to the mother–child dyad, and close monitoring of the bodies of mothers and children, there are material links to programmes of maternal surveillance pioneered in historical puericultura projects. Furthermore, like earlier puericultura projects, CONIN has had national reach through close ties with the Macri government, which granted the foundation responsibility to carry out maternalist public-health projects and shape public policies.Footnote 105

Although the extent of Albino's personal involvement in developing the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social is unknown, his rhetoric and CONIN's practices add to our understanding of the social imaginary in which the system to predict teenage pregnancy was designed and deployed.

Conclusion

Although much about the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social remains opaque, through close readings of media interviews with its intellectual architects, analysis of technical reports, consideration of another technological collaboration between its main actors, and attention to historical and political context, this paper has sought to illuminate shapes and forms of the social logics and visions of desirable futures encoded in the system. We argue that there are meaningful affinities and intertextualities as well as material links and ideological continuities between the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social and the eugenic practices of puericultura popular in the early twentieth century.

Contrary to claims that the Plataforma Tecnológica de Intervención Social is innovative and futuristic (which invoke Silicon Valley rhetorics of ‘disruption’), we argue that the system is better described in terms of continuity with established forms of social surveillance and control. It is the latest in a long line of puericultural projects that surveil the bodies and lives of girls and women in the name of social improvement.

In an essay on Latin American eugenics, historian Alexandra Minna Stern reflects on the movement's legacies in the region. She writes,

Biometric systems, with strong affinities to biotypology, also have proven resilient. Argentina began its long love affair with biometrics in the early 1900s, and it continued unabated during the extended eugenics era (1910s–1950s) and the military dictatorship (1976–1983) with its obsession with identification cards (fichas) to track dissidents. More recently, during her presidency, Cristina Kirchner spearheaded a major initiative to apply biometric fingerprinting to all citizens, creating a database that could be cross-referenced with other institutional and medical records, thus assembling the kind of biotypological registry that would have been lauded by the eugenicists of yesteryear.Footnote 106

One can imagine that puericulture advocates of yesteryear would have similarly lauded a system with which, at a click, they opened ‘a spreadsheet with data on the babies, children and pregnant women’ living in a particular house. And clicking again,

a 16-year-old pregnant teenager appears, showing her health, educational and sanitary background, the medical treatments she has undergone and those pending, her schooling, the levels of risk of those she lives with, characteristics of the house she lives in, the water she drinks, the family composition to determine if there is overcrowding, and much more.Footnote 107

Eugenics, as Miranda writes, possesses conceptual viscosity. It can inflitrate various scientific theories and be adapted to changing political programmes. It can shapeshift from sterilization to education, from fichas to fingerprints. It may even take the form of what we could call ‘data eugenics’, slipping and slithering into a Microsoft Azure platform.

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