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【活動資訊】2018年10月1日【亞比中心】Susan Greenhalgh演講

Susan Greenhalgh演講(台大場):
Who is Governing Health on the Chinese Mainland? Big Pharma, Big Food, and the Making of China’s Obesity Epidemic 
時間:2018年10月1日(星期一)15:30—17:00
地點:台灣大學社會科學院大樓108室
主持人:吳嘉苓(台大社會系教授)
 
Susan Greenhalgh為哈佛人類學系研究教授,以研究中國人口政策與科學治理享譽國際,其中Just One Child: Science and Policy in Deng’s China (2008) 獲得亞洲研究學會、科技與社會學會等諸多專書大獎。近年來致力於肥胖的生命政治與科學治理,著有 Fat-talk Nation: The Human Costs of America’s War on Fat (2015)等專著,廣受注目。此次來台講學的兩場專題演講,則呈現她最新力作。在台大場的「Who is Governing Health on the Chinese Mainland? Big Pharma, Big Food, and the Making of China’s Obesity Epidemic」,是從科學治理與政治經濟學的角度,探討西方藥廠與食品產業如何影響中國的肥胖治理。在中研院場的「Can Science and Technology Save China?」,則是從人類學的視野檢視當代中國在健康與環境科學的發展,反思所謂科技救國所面臨的挑戰。精彩可期,請大家踴躍參加。
 
Susan Greenhalgh的簡歷:https://anthropology.fas.harvard.edu/people/susan-greenhalgh
 
主辦單位:東亞科技與社會期刊(EASTS)、台大亞洲社會比較研究中心(GARC)、中研院近代史研究所
 
演講說明:
Since the late 1970s China has pushed to become a wealthy and powerful nation through state-directed marketization, producing a political economy of state neoliberalism centered on a tight nexus of state-science-industry. The state largely abandoned its support for health, defunding the health sciences and urging researchers to form public-private partnerships with corporations. Meantime, rapid globalization has brought the adoption of unhealthy diet, exercise, and other lifestyle behaviors. The result has been an explosion of chronic diseases, including obesity, which have become the leading cause of disease and death. These developments raise a critical question: who is actually governing the health of China’s people -- state, science, or industry? This talk examines the ways in which global corporations with a financial interest in shaping the understanding and management of obesity have intervened in China. It shows how Western firms were central actors at every stage in the creation, definition, and management of obesity. From Big Pharma to Big Food, transnational corporations have been profiting from the epidemic of Chinese obesity while doing little to effectively treat or prevent it. This works suggests the need to make science central to our understanding of Asian societies, and to examine science as a form of knowledge deeply shaped by politics and political economy.