When:
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
1:30 PM - 3:00 PM CT
Where: Kresge Hall, 1515 Trienens Forum, 1880 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208 map it
Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Public - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students
Contact:
Liv Caldwell
(847) 491-5871
gender@northwestern.edu
Group: Gender & Sexuality Studies Program
Category: Lectures & Meetings, Academic
A book talk by Yan Long, Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of California
Berkeley.
Challenging conventional wisdom crediting domestic factors with shaping health institutions, this talk demonstrates how foreign organizations, government agencies, and grassroots activists collectively transformed China’s epidemic governance. Under pressure from international norms and donors (especially from the U.S. and U.K.), Chinese officials selectively absorbed Western epidemiology and liberal practices such as community participation, human rights discourse, and NGO engagement to enhance China’s global standing. Rather than promoting political liberalization, these engagements enabled the state to build a professionalized yet stratified disease surveillance system that laid the groundwork for its COVID-19 responses. This hybrid system empowered certain groups such as urban gay men to gain state recognition and resources, while making other marginalized populations invisible. This talk corrects a core misconception—that liberal diffusion and authoritarian expansion are opposite—by revealing their mutual constitution in biomedical politics.
This event is co-sponsored by East Asia Research Forum, Gender and Sexuality Studies, the Sociology Department, and the Kreeger Wolf Fund.