Udodiri Okwandu
doctoral candidate in the History of Science
Udodiri Okwandu is a graduate student in the History of Science, with a secondary in African and African American Studies and a Presidential Scholar at Harvard University. She is interested in the history of medicine and public health, history of gender and sexuality, and critical race theory in the United States. She is particularly interested in the ways in which scientific and medical inquiry have been deployed by the state to manage and control marginalized populations. Orginally from Southern California, Udodiri completed her undergraduate studies in 2017 at Harvard College where she graduated cum laude with an AB in the History of science (with a focus in Mind, Brain, and Behavior) and a minor in Global Health and Health Policy. Her senior thesis, which won the Thomas T. Hoopes Prize, an award which recognizes outstanding scholarly work or research by students selected by a committee of faculty from Harvard University's Faculty of Arts and Sciences, examined the medicalization and racialization of Civil Rights protests in the 1960s, contextualizing it with the rise of law and order political ideology.
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Ford Hall Forum: Laura Spinney on How the 1918 Spanish Flu Changed the World
Partner:Ford Hall Forum -
The Coronavirus Exposes America’s Public Health Crisis: Racism
Partner:Museum of African American History -
The History of Medical and Scientific Racism in America
Partner:NOVA Science Café