Susan-greenhalgh.com



January 2021 _________________________________________________________________________________

SUSAN GREENHALGH

Department of Anthropology, Harvard University

21 Divinity Ave., Cambridge, MA 02138

(949) 929-1001 (mobile), greenhalgh@fas.harvard.edu



_________________________________________________________________________________

EDUCATION

Columbia University--M.A. and Ph.D in Anthropology, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences;

Certificate of East Asian Institute, School of International Affairs

Wellesley College--B.A. in Psychology

FIELDS OF SPECIALIZATION

Anthropology of Medicine, Global Health, and Public Health; Science and Technology Studies; Anthropology of the State, Governance, and Public Policy; Obesity Epidemic; The Politics of Reproduction/Population; Gender Studies; People's Republic of China, Taiwan, Selected interests in U.S. society

EMPLOYMENT

John King & Wilma Cannon Fairbank Research Professor of Chinese Society, Harvard University (Fall 2018-)

John King & Wilma Cannon Fairbank Professor of Chinese Society, Harvard University (2013-18)

Visiting Scholar, Research Center on Public Health, Tsinghua University (Beijing) (Fall 2013)

Professor, Department of Anthropology, Harvard University (July 2011-18)

Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Irvine (July 2001-June 2011 )

Faculty-in-Residence, University of California Washington, DC Program (2005-06)

Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Irvine (July 1994-June 2001)

Visiting Instructor, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University (Spring 1993 and 1994)

Senior Associate, Research Division, Population Council (Jan. 1990-June 1994)

Associate, Center for Policy Studies, Population Council (1987-89)

Staff Associate, Center for Policy Studies, Population Council (Nov. 1984-86)

Berelson Fellow, Center for Policy Studies, Population Council (1983-84)

Postdoctoral Fellow, Chinese Studies Center, University of California, Berkeley (1982-83)

FELLOWSHIPS AND AWARDS

Professional Career Achievement Awards

2016-17 Fellow of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, 12 months starting July 2016

2016-17 Walter Channing Cabot Fellow of Harvard University for scholarly contributions, including the 2015 publication of Fat-talk Nation, 12 months.

2011 Olivia Schlieffelin Nordberg Award for Excellence in Writing and Editing in the Population Sciences, awarded in New York City, November.

2002 Clifford C. Clogg Award for Early Career Achievement of the Population Association of America, honors outstanding innovative scholarly achievement during the first 20 years post-Ph.D.

Book and Article Awards

Just One Child, 2010 Joseph Levenson Prize of the Association for Asian Studies for the book that makes the greatest contribution to the understanding of post-1900 China

Just One Child, 2010 Rachel Carson Prize of the Society for the Social Study of Science for the best book in science studies with social or political relevance

Just One Child, Honorable Mention, 2010 Senior Book Prize of the American Ethnological Society (AES) for exemplary work that speaks to contemporary issues beyond the discipline and academy

Just One Child, Honorable Mention, 2009 Gregory Bateson Book Prize of the Society for Cultural Anthropology (SCA) for interdisciplinary, experimental, innovative work in the spirit of Bateson

“Missile Science, Population Science,” Honorable mention, Gordon White Prize for the most original article in contemporary Chinese studies, China Quarterly, 2005 (awarded 2006)

Fellowships and Grants

Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, Harvard University, Fellowship to support workshop to translate Fat-talk Nation into Chinese (March 2019).

Harvard University Asia Center, Grant for Research on Obesity, Inc? Public and Private in the Making of China’s Obesity Epidemic (May 2015-December 2016).

Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Grant for Conference on A Better Life Through Science and Biomedicine? Troubling an Enduring China Dream (held April 2016).

Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, Grant for Conference on A Better Life Through Science and Biomedicine? Troubling an Enduring China Dream (to be held April 2016).

Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, Post-PhD Research Grant for Project on Making Sexual Science and Policy in China (12 months, 2012-13). Later declined.

National Science Foundation, Science, Technology, and Society Program, Grant for Project on Making Sexual Science and Policy in China (12 months, 2011-15).

Center for Asian Studies, UCI, Chew-Liang Chinese Rural Development Research Program, Grant for Project on An “Army of Violent Bachelors?” Governing Masculinity in Rural China (2010). Later declined.

Center for Asian Studies, UCI, Grant for Research on Producing Poison? Tracing the Supply Chain of Contaminated Heparin (2008).

Center for Global Peace and Conflict Studies, UCI, Grant for Research on Gender Consequences of One-Child Policy (2005)

Center for Asian Studies, UCI, Grant for Research on Gender Consequences of One-Child Policy (2005)

Open Society Institute, Publishing Grants for Two Books on Chinese Population Policy (2004-05)

National Science Foundation, Science and Technology Studies Program, Grant for Project on Population Science and the Making of China’s One-Child-per-Couple Policy (Summer 2002-Summer 2004)

Newkirk Center for Science and Society, Seed Grant (Spring 2002-Spring 2003)

Open Society Institute, Individual Project Fellowship (Fall 1998-Winter 1999)

John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Distinguished Visitorship (Fall 1997)

Global Peace & Conflict Studies, UCI, Research Grant (1996-97)

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Supplementary Grant (1992-94)

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Grant for Research on Political Economy and Fertility in Rural China (1992-94)

Columbia University, East Asian Institute, Grant for Project on Chinese Entrepreneurship in Taiwan and Southeast Asia (1989-91)

Visiting Scholar, East Asian Institute, Columbia University (1989-90)

National Science Foundation, Cultural Anthropology Program, Grant for Research on Socialist Modernization and the Demographic Transition in Rural China (1987-89)

Pacific Cultural Foundation, Grant for Research on Family Change in Taiwan (1984)

Berelson Fellowship, Center for Policy Studies, Population Council (1983-84)

Postdoctoral Fellowship, Chinese Studies Center, University of California, Berkeley (1982-83)

Columbia President's Fellowship (1980-81, 1976-77)

American Association of University Women, Dissertation Fellowship (1979-80)

Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, Grant-in-Aid (1979)

Fulbright-Hays Dissertation Grant (1978-79)

Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowship (FLAS) (1977-78)

Wellesley College Graduate Fellowship (1976-77)

National Defense Foreign Language Fellowship (NDFL) (1975-76)

Columbia University Fellowship (1974-75)

College Honors

Wellesley Scholar (based on grade point average) (1972)

Graduation with High Honors (based on thesis) (1972)

Phi Beta Kappa, Wellesley (1972)

OTHER HONORS

2020 Keynote Speaker, Workshop on China in the Urban Age: Health, Food, Waste in the Chinese City. University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia, 26-30 October 2020.

2019 Keynote Speaker, Conference on Chinese Techno Futures, China Centre, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK, 31 May-1 June 2019.

2018 Annual Kassen Lecture, Department of Anthropology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, 2 November 2018.

2016 Keynote Speaker, University of Copenhagen Conference on Lifestyle and Kinds of Living: Opportunities, Conditions, and Biology, 18-19 May 2016.

2012 Annual Future of Social Science Lecture, Institute for Social, Behavioral, and Economic Research, University of California, Santa Barbara, 10 May 2012.

2008 Annual Reischauer Lecture Series, Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, Harvard University, 16-18 April 2008.

Speaker, Launch Conference for the British Inter-university China Centre (BICC), London and Oxford, UK, 27 June 2007.

Opening-night speaker, Berlin Roundtable on Transnationality: Population Politics and Human Rights, Berlin, Germany, 15-19 February 2007.

PUBLICATIONS

Books

Can Science and Technology Save China? S. Greenhalgh and Li Zhang, editors. Cornell University Press, 2020, 226 pp.

Fat-talk Nation: The Human Costs of America’s War on Fat. Cornell University Press, 2015, 324 pp. Paperback edition publ. August 2017. Chinese translation available soon from the China Social Sciences Press.

Cultivating Global Citizens: Population in the Rise of China. The Edwin O. Reischauer Lectures 2008. Harvard University Press, 2010, 156 pp.

Just One Child: Science and Policy in Deng’s China. University of California Press, 2008, 403 pp.

Governing China’s Population: From Leninist to Neoliberal Biopolitics. S. Greenhalgh and Edwin A. Winckler. Stanford University Press, 2005, 394 pp.

Under the Medical Gaze: Facts and Fictions of Chronic Pain. University of California Press, 2001, 371 pp.

Chinese State Birth Planning in the 1990s and Beyond (S. Greenhalgh and Edwin A. Winckler). Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, for Resource Information Center, U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 2001, 260-pp. single-spaced.

Situating Fertility: Anthropology and Demographic Inquiry, editor. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995, 304 pp.

Contending Approaches to the Political Economy of Taiwan, Edwin A. Winckler and S. Greenhalgh, editors. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1988, 320 pp. Chinese translation published by Lujiang Press, Xiamen, 1992. Taiwan edition published by Jen-chien Publishing Co., Taipei, 1994.

English-Chinese and Chinese-English Glossary of Demography, coedited with Ye Xiushu and Zhao Shili. Chengdu: Sichuan University Press, 1989, 906 pp.

Journal articles and book chapters (selected)

Why Coke Wants You to Exercise, and Other Secrets of Late Industrial Product-Defense Science (Under review)

Inside ILSI: How Coca-Cola, Working Through its Scientific Nonprofit, Created a Global Science of Exercise for Obesity and Got it Embedded in Chinese Policy (1995-2015), Journal of Health Politics, Policy,and Law (online publ. 21 September 2020). Print version 46(2), pp. 235-276, April 2021. .

Same Old Coercion Story (Review of 2019 documentary film “One Child Nation”), China File.

(published online 6 February 2020).

The Corporate Management of the Global Obesity Epidemic, or How Coke Distorted Obesity Science and Policy in China. Forthcoming in Handbook of Critical Obesity Study, Michael Gard (ed.), Routledge.

Introduction. Governing Through Science: The Anthropology of Science and Technology in China, in Can Science and Technology Save China?, edited by S. Greenhalgh and Li Zhang. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2020, pp. 1-24.

The Good Scientist and the Good Multinational: Managing the Ethics of Industry-Funded Health Science, in Can Science and Technology Save China?, edited by S. Greenhalgh and Li Zhang. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2020, pp. 139-162.

China’s Feminist Fight: #MeToo in the Middle Kingdom, Review Essay, with Xiying Wang, Foreign Affairs, July/August 2019, pp. 170-176.

Making China Safe for Coke: How Coca-Cola Shaped Obesity Science and Policy in China, The BMJ 2019; 364: k5050. (published 9 January 2019).

Soda Industry Influence on Obesity Science and Policy in China, Journal of Public Health Policy 40(1), March 2019, pp. 5-16. (published online 9 January 2019).

Science and Serendipity: Finding Coca-Cola in China, Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 62(1), Winter 2019, pp. 131-152.

Making Demography Astonishing: Lessons in the Politics of Population Science, Demography 55(2), April 2018, pp. 721-731.

Why Does the End of the One-Child Policy Matter? in The China Questions: Critical Insights into a Rising Power, edited by Jennifer Rudolph and Michael Szonyi. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018, pp. 123-128.

Cold War Population Science and Politics in Asia, East Asian Science, Technology, and Society: An International Journal 10(4), December 2016, pp. 469-474.

Neoliberal Science, Chinese-Style: Making and Managing the “Obesity Epidemic,” Social Studies of Science 46(4), August 2016, pp. 485-510.

Disordered Eating/Eating Disorder: Hidden Perils of the Nation’s Fight Against Fat, Medical Anthropology Quarterly 30(4), December 2016, pp. 545-562.

Bad Biocitizens? Latinos and the US “Obesity Epidemic,” with Megan A. Carney, Human Organization 73(3), Fall 2014, pp. 267-276.

Reprinted in Cultural Anthropology: Contemporary, Public, and Critical Readings, Keri Vacanti Brondo, ed. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2016 (1st ed.) and 2019 (2nd ed.), pp. 380-388.

“Bare Sticks” and Other Dangers to the Social Body: Assembling Fatherhood in China. In Globalized Fatherhood, Marcia C. Inhorn, Wendy Chavkin, and Jose-Alberto Navarro (eds.), Berghahn, 2014, pp. 359-381.

Patriarchal Demographics? China’s Sex Ratio Reconsidered, Population and Development Review 38 Supplement, 2012, pp. 130-149.

Reprinted in The Population of China in the 21st Century, Dudley L. Poston and Gu Baochang, eds. New York: Springer, 2015.

Weighty Subjects: The Biopolitics of the U.S. War on Fat, American Ethnologist 39(3), August 2012, pp. 471-487.

Condensed and reprinted in The Gender, Culture and Power Reader, Dorothy Hodgson, ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015, pp. 223-234.

Reprinted in Sociocultural Anthropology: Critical and Primary Sources, Barbara D. Miller, ed. (April 2018). London: Bloomsbury Publ.

Excerpted and reprinted in Examination Paper and Markscheme Pack (May 2019). Den Haag, The Netherlands: International Baccalaureate Organization.

On the Crafting of Population Thought, Population and Development Review 38(1), March 2012, pp. 121-131.

Governing Chinese Life: From Sovereignty to Biopolitical Governance. In Governance of Life in Chinese Moral Experience: The Quest for an Adequate Life, Everett Yuehong Zhang, Arthur Kleinman, and Weiming Tu, eds. New York: Routledge, 2010, pp. 146-162.

China’s Population Policies: Engendered Biopolitics, the One-Child Norm, and Masculinization of Child Sex Ratios. In Reproductive Health in a Neoliberalizing World, Mohan Rao and Sarah Sexton, eds. New Delhi: Sage, 2010, pp. 299-337.

The Chinese Biopolitical: Facing the Twenty-First Century, New Genetics and Society 28(3), September 2009, pp. 205-222.

Governing China’s Population: The State Planning of Unplanned Persons. In Between Life and Death: Governing Population in an Era of Human Rights, Sabine Berking and Magdalena Zolkos, eds. Bern and Berlin: Peter Lang, 2009, pp. 75-98.

Missile Science, Population Science: The Origins of China’s One-Child Policy, The China Quarterly 182, June 2005, pp. 253-276.

Reprinted in Mr. Science and Chairman Mao’s Cultural Revolution: Science and Technology in Modern China, Chunjuan Nancy Wei and Darryl E. Brock, eds. Lanham, MD: Lexington, 2013, pp. 305-331.

Labeling Woefulness: The Social Construction of Fibromyalgia, with Nortin M. Hadler, Spine: An International Journal for the Study of the Spine 30(1), 2004, 1-4.

Controlling Births and Bodies in Village China. Reprinted in People’s Republic of China, Vol. 1: Natural Resources, Population and Social Life, Frank N. Pieke, ed. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publ., 2002, pp. 121-148.

Anthropological Engagements with China’s One-Child Policy: Controversies, Contradictions, Productivities. Anthropology in Action: Journal for Applied Anthropology in Policy and Practice 11(1), 2004, 27-34.

Globalization and Population Governance in China. In Global Assemblages: Technology, Governmentality, Ethics, Aihwa Ong and Stephen J. Collier, eds. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2005, pp. 354-372.

Making Up China's "Black Population." In Categories and Contexts: Anthropological and Historical Studies in Critical Demography, Simon Szreter, Hania Sholkamy, and A. Dharmalingam, eds. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004, pp. 148-172.

Science, Modernity, and the Making of China’s One-Child Policy. Population and Development Review 29(2), June 2003, pp. 163-196.

Reprinted in The Population of China in the 21st Century, Dudley L. Poston and Gu Baochang, eds. New York: Springer, 2015.

Reprinted in Women in Asia, vol. 3, Health and Sexuality, Louise Edwards and Mina Roces, eds. London: Routledge, 2009, pp. 131-165.

Planned Births, Unplanned Persons: "Population" in the Making of Chinese Modernity. American Ethnologist 30(2), May 2003, pp. 196-215.

Fresh Winds in Beijing: Chinese Feminists Speak Out on the One-Child Policy and Women's Lives. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 26(3), Spring 2001, pp. 847-886.

Toward a Reflexive Population Studies for the Twenty-first Century (Por uma abordagem reflexiva para estudos de populacao para no Seculo XXI). In The Demography of Social Exclusion (Demografia da Exclusao Social), Maria Coleta de Oliveira, ed. Sao Paulo: Editora da Unicamp (University of Campinas Press), 2001, pp. 25-46.

Fertility: Political and Political-Economic Perspectives. In International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Neil J. Smelser and Paul B. Baltes, eds. Oxford: Elsevier, 2001, Vol. 8, pp. 5547-5554.

Managing "The Missing Girls" in Chinese Population Discourse. In Cultural Perspectives on Reproductive Health, Carla Maklouf Obermeyer, ed., Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001, pp. 131-152.

Methods and Meanings: Reflections on Disciplinary Difference. Population and Development Review 23(4), December 1997, pp. 819-825.

The Social Construction of Population Science: An Intellectual, Institutional, and Political History of 20th Century Demography. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 38(1), January 1996, pp. 26-66.

Anthropology Theorizes Reproduction: Integrating Practice, Political Economic, and Feminist Perspectives. In Situating Fertility: Anthropology and Demographic Inquiry, Susan Greenhalgh, ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995, pp. 3-28.

Afterword: (Re)capturing Reproduction for Anthropology. In Situating Fertility: Anthropology and Demographic Inquiry, Susan Greenhalgh, ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995, pp. 259-263.

Engendering Reproductive Policy and Practice in Peasant China: For a Feminist Demography of Reproduction (with Jiali Li). Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 20(3), Spring 1995, pp. 601-641.

Reprinted in Gender and Scientific Authority, Barbara Laslett, Sally Kohlstedt, Helen Longino, and Evelynn Hammonds, eds. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996, pp. 391-431.

De-Orientalizing the Chinese Family Firm. American Ethnologist, 21(4), November 1994, pp. 742-771.

Restraining Population Growth in Three Chinese Villages (with Zhu Chuzhu and Li Nan). Population and Development Review, 20(2), June 1994, pp. 365-395.

Controlling Births and Bodies in Village China. American Ethnologist, 21(1), February 1994, pp. 1-30.

The Peasant Household in the Transition from Socialism: State Intervention and its Consequences in China. In The Economic Anthropology of the State, Elizabeth Brumfiel, ed. Lanham: University Press of America, 1994, pp. 43-94.

The Peasantization of Population Policy in Shaanxi. In Chinese Families in the Post-Mao Era, Deborah Davis and Stevan Harrell, eds. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993, pp. 219-250.

Population Studies in China: Privileged Past, Anxious Future. Reprinted in The Population of Modern China, Dudley L. Poston, Jr. and David Yaukey, eds. New York: Plenum, 1992, pp. 19-46.

Toward a Political Economy of Fertility: Anthropological Contributions. Population and Development Review, 16(1), March 1990, pp. 85-106.

Translated and published as Vers Une Economie Politique de la Fecondite: Contributions Anthropologique.” In Les Theories de la Fecondite, Henri Leridon (ed.). Paris: Editions de L’Ined, coll. Textes Fondamentaux, 2014.

Reprinted in The Earthscan Reader in Population and Development, Paul Demeny and Geoffrey McNicoll, eds. London: Earthscan, 1998.

Socialism and Fertility in China. In World Population: Approaching the Year 2000, Special Issue of The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Samuel Preston, ed., July 1990, pp. 73-86.

Population Studies in China: Privileged Past, Anxious Future. The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, 24, July 1990, pp. 357-384.

Reprinted in The Population of Modern China, Dudley L. Poston, Jr. and David Yaukey, eds. New York: Plenum, 1992, pp. 19-46.

The Evolution of the One-Child Policy in Shaanxi, 1979-88. The China Quarterly, 122, June 1990, pp. 191-229.

Social Causes and Consequences of Taiwan's Postwar Economic Development. In Anthropological Studies of the Taiwan Area: Accomplishments and Prospects, Kwang-chih Chang, Kuang-chou Li, Arthur P. Wolf, and Alexander Chien-chung Yin, eds. Taipei: National Taiwan University Press, 1989, pp. 351-390.

Land Reform and Family Entrepreneurship in East Asia. In Population and Rural Development: Institutions and Policies, Geoffrey McNicoll and Mead Cain, eds. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989, pp. 77-118.

Fertility as Mobility: Sinic Transitions. Population and Development Review, 14(4), December 1988, pp. 629-674.

Families and Networks in Taiwan's Economic Development. In Contending Approaches to the Political Economy of Taiwan, Edwin A. Winckler and Susan Greenhalgh, eds. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1988, pp. 224-245.

Reprinted in China, Korea, and Taiwan, vol. II, The Political Economy of East Asia, John Ravenhill, ed. Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar Publ., 1995.

Analytical Issues and Historical Episodes (with Edwin A. Winckler). In Contending Approaches to the Political Economy of Taiwan, 1988, pp. 3-19.

Supranational Processes of Income Distribution. In Contending Approaches to the Political Economy of Taiwan, 1988, pp. 67-100.

Intergenerational Contracts: Familial Roots of Sexual Stratification in Taiwan. In A Home Divided: Women and Income in the Third World, Daisy Dwyer and Judith Bruce, eds. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1988, pp. 39-70.

Fertility Policy in China: Future Options (with John Bongaarts). Science, 235, 6 March 1987, pp. 1167-1172.

Reprinted in The Population of Modern China, Dudley L. Poston, Jr. and David Yaukey, eds. New York: Plenum, 1992, pp. 401-419.

Shifts in China's Population Policy, 1984-1986: Views from the Central, Provincial and Local Levels. Population and Development Review, 12(3), September 1986, pp. 491-515.

An Alternative to the One-child Policy in China (with John Bongaarts). Population and Development Review, 11(4), December 1985, pp. 585-617.

Is Inequality Demographically Induced? The Family Cycle and the Distribution of Income in Taiwan. American Anthropologist, 87(3), September 1985, pp. 571-594.

Sexual Stratification: The Other Side of 'Growth with Equity' in East Asia. Population and Development Review, 11(2), June 1985, pp. 265-314.

Networks and Their Nodes: Urban Society on Taiwan. The China Quarterly, 99, September 1984, pp. 529-552.

Income Units: The Ethnographic Alternative to Standardization. In Income Distribution and the Family, Yoram Ben-Porath, ed. Supplement to Population and Development Review, 8, 1982, pp. 70-91.

Bound Feet, Hobbled Lives: Women in the Old China. Frontiers: Journal of Women Studies, 2(1), Spring 1977, pp. 7-21.

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS

Society for Social Studies of Science (4S)

Association for Asian Studies (AAS)

Society for East Asian Anthropology

American Anthropological Association (AAA)

American Ethnological Society (AES)

Association for Feminist Anthropology

Society for Medical Anthropology (SMA)

TEACHING

Courses taught at Harvard and the University of California, Irvine

China Through Ethnography and Film (Undergraduate seminar)

State and Society in Contemporary China (Upper-division undergraduate course)

Ethnography of Contemporary China (Graduate seminar)

Readings in Chinese Society and Culture (Graduate course)

The Anthropology of Public Policy (Upper-division undergraduate course, UCDC)

The Woman and the Body (Upper-division undergraduate course)

Writing the Self (Upper-division undergraduate writing seminar)

Gender and Globalization (Graduate seminar)

Contemporary Ethnography (Graduate seminar)

Social Bodies: The Anthropology of Population (Graduate seminar)

Science, Technology, and the Reproductive Body (Graduate seminar)

Anthropology of Governance (Graduate seminar)

The Anthropology of Governing: Numbers and the Invention and Governance of Populations (Graduate seminar)

The Anthropology of Modernity (Graduate seminar)

The Anthropology of Public Policy (Graduate seminar)

Biopolitics (Graduate seminar)

Anthropological Fieldwork Methods (Graduate seminar)

Grant and Proposal Writing (Graduate seminar)

Dissertation Writing (Graduate seminar)

Visiting Instructor, Princeton University (Spring Semester 1993 and 1994)--Taught graduate seminar on Gender and Development at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School for Public and International Affairs

RECENT MEDIA COVERAGE OR MENTION

January 2021

Bloomberg - Coca-Cola Severs Longtime Ties with Pro-Sugar Group.



October 2020

Corporate Crime Reporter – Susan Greenhalgh on Making the World Safe for Coca Cola



September 2020

Harvard Gazette -- Exploring Coke’s Role in Obesity Strategy in China, Elsewhere: Harvard Researcher Looks at How Company Helped Shape Health Science, Policy.



January 2019

New York Times – How Chummy Are Junk Food Giants and China’s Health Officials? They Share Offices



Harvard Gazette – Researcher Finds Coke’s fingerprints on health policy in China



NPR – Study: Coca-Cola Shaped China’s Efforts To Fight Obesity: Goats and Soda



For more, please see Portfolio pages of website

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