Introduction : Framing Issues of Health, Hygiene and Eugenics in Southeastern Europe
Christian Promitzer, Sevasti Trubeta and Marius Turda
Part I: German Eugenic Paradigms
Racial Expertise and German Eugenic Strategies for Southeastern Europe, Paul Weindling
Part II: Hygiene and Health Politics
Orientalizing Disease. Austro-Hungarian Policies of ‘Race,’ Gender and Hygiene in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1874–1914, Brigitte Fuchs
Typhus, Turks, and Roma: Hygiene and Ethnic Difference in Bulgaria, 1912–1944, Christian Promitzer
Health Policy and Private Care: Malaria Sanitization in Early Twentieth Century Greece, Katerina Gardika
Combating Infant Mortality in Bulgaria: Welfare Activities, National Propaganda, and the Establishment of Pediatrics, 1900–1940, Kristina Popova
Politics, Modernization and Public Health in Greece: The Case of Occupational Health, 1900–1940, Leda Papastefanaki
‘Like Yeast in Fermentation’: Public Health in Interwar Yugoslavia, Željko Dugac
Part III: Eugenics and Reproduction
Marital Health and Eugenics in Bulgaria, 1878–1940, Gergana Mircheva
Eugenic Birth Control and Prenuptial Health Certification in Interwar Greece, Sevasti Trubeta
Eugenics and ‘Puericulture’: Medical Attempts to Improve the ‘Biological Capital’ in Interwar Greece, Vassiliki Theodorou and Despina Karakatsani
Controlling the National Body: Ideas of Racial Purification in Interwar Romania, 1918–1944, Marius Turda
The Eugenic Fortress: Alfred Csallner and the Saxon Eugenic Discourse in Interwar Romania, Tudor Georgescu
Fighting the White Plague: Demography and Abortion in the Independent State of Croatia, Rory Yeomans
Part IV: New Research Agendas
Remapping the Historiography of Modernization and State-Building in Southeastern Europe through Hygiene, Health and Eugenics, Maria Bucur