Controlled reproduction in SF
- Poul Anderson, Virgin Planet (1959) - A caste of doctor-priests control the reproductive technology on an all-female planet.
- Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale - women who can breed have their breeding controlled - other children taken from them, so they are free to be bred.
- Anthony Burgess, The Wanting Seed - homophobic & misanthropic tale in which reproduction is controlled, and infanticide is encouraged
- Rita Donovan, The Plague Saint - reproduction controlled in the aftermath of an aids-like plague ...
- Jane Fletcher - A caste of priests control the reproductive technology on an all-female planet.
- Esther Friesner, The Psalms of Herod (sequel: The Sword of Mary) (abortion and birth control are outlawed, and reproduction is controlled through infanticide)
- Sandi Hall, Wingwomen of Hera (Spinsters / Aunt Lute: 1987)
- Sarah Hall, Daughters of the North - Women in the UK are fitted with a cervical coil to prevent reproduction. A group of militant women resist.
- Pearlie McNeill, "The Awakening" (in Jen Green & Sarah Lefanu, editors, Despatches from the Frontiers of the Female Mind, The Women's Press: 1985)
- Thomas F. Monteleone, "Breath's a Ware That Will Not Keep" (in Dystopian Visions, edited by Roger Elwood (Prentice Hall: 1975).
- Rachel Cosgrove Payes, "Come Take a Dip with Me in the Genetic Pool" (in Dystopian Visions, edited by Roger Elwood (Prentice Hall: 1975).
- Jean Stewart, Isis Series. (the evil Elysium society locks fertile women into breeding camps)
- Sheri Tepper, The Gates to Women's Country
- Susan Weston, Children of the Light. Post-holocaust US. Most men have mysteriously died; society is continued in small enclaves visited by government men who impregnate the women (and very young women). One young man is transported into this grim future and makes a life with the women and children of a small village.
- Kate Wilhelm, Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang
- John Wyndham, "Consider Her Ways"
- Mandatory infanticide
- Anthony Burgess, The Wanting Seed - homophobic & misanthropic tale in which reproduction is controlled, and infanticide is encouraged
- Esther Friesner, The Psalms of Herod (sequel: The Sword of Mary) (abortion and birth control are outlawed, and reproduction is controlled through infanticide)
- Mandatory abortion
- Mandatory birth control
- Sarah Hall, Daughters of the North - Women in the UK are fitted with a cervical coil to prevent reproduction. A group of militant women resist.
- Compulsory pregnancy / reproduction
- Nigel Farringdon, The Year of Compulsory Birth (2001)
- D. F. Jones, Implosion
- Jean Stewart, The Isis series (breeding camps) (first novel)
- Small group controls reproductive permits
- Poul Anderson, Virgin Planet (1959) - A caste of doctor-priests control the reproductive technology on an all-female planet.
- Jane Fletcher - A caste of priests control the reproductive technology on an all-female planet.
- Sheri Tepper, The Gates to Women's Country