
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The WHO framework treats sexuality as a variable: a demographic characteristic to be counted alongside age and disability. This episode argues it is something else entirely.
A regime is a historically constructed system that operates simultaneously across governance, law, economic policy, cultural norms, and knowledge production. It does not sit in one box of the framework. It conditions all the boxes.
Drawing on Foucault, Butler, and West & Zimmerman, Part II makes the central theoretical move of the series: the distinction between a variable and a regime, and why that distinction changes everything about what an adequate analysis of queer health inequities requires.
Part II of VII. Written and narrated by Dr. Omer Bangash.
Read the full written version with references:
https://obangash.substack.com/p/regime-beneath-the-regime-sexuality-9f5
By Dr. Omer BangashThe WHO framework treats sexuality as a variable: a demographic characteristic to be counted alongside age and disability. This episode argues it is something else entirely.
A regime is a historically constructed system that operates simultaneously across governance, law, economic policy, cultural norms, and knowledge production. It does not sit in one box of the framework. It conditions all the boxes.
Drawing on Foucault, Butler, and West & Zimmerman, Part II makes the central theoretical move of the series: the distinction between a variable and a regime, and why that distinction changes everything about what an adequate analysis of queer health inequities requires.
Part II of VII. Written and narrated by Dr. Omer Bangash.
Read the full written version with references:
https://obangash.substack.com/p/regime-beneath-the-regime-sexuality-9f5