Alka Menon

Alka Menon's picture
Assistant Professor
Research Areas: 
Health and Medicine, Race and Ethnicity, Gender, Science and Technology Studies, Globalization and AI
Assistant Professor of Sociology
Education: 
Ph.D., Northwestern University, 2018
M.A., Northwestern University, 2013
B.A., Cornell University, 2010
Areas of Interest: 
Health and Medicine; Race and Ethnicity; Gender; Globalization; Culture/Knowledge; Sociology of the Body; Science and Technology
Address: 
493 College Street, Room 401
Phone number: 
203-432-5150

Alka Menon conducts research at the intersection of race, medicine, and markets. Broadly, she is interested in the effects of globalization and medical consumerism on physician authority and healthcare. Currently, she is working on a book project on cosmetic surgery in transnational perspective, focusing on the multiethnic cases of the U.S. and Malaysia. Stemming from this research, she has written on online reviews of physicians and the role of physicians as cultural gatekeepers and intermediaries. In a collaborative study with clinicians, she has investigated patients’ attitudes toward the use of artificial intelligence in diagnosis and screening of skin cancer. Her award-winning work has been published in Ethnic and Racial Studies, Social Science & Medicine, and Poetics and has been supported by the National Science Foundation and the Social Science Research Council.

Menon received her B.A. in the Biological Sciences from Cornell University, where she was also a College Scholar, and her Ph.D. in Sociology from Northwestern University. Her research and teaching interests span sociology, science and technology studies, legal studies, racial and ethnic studies, gender studies, and qualitative methods. At Yale, she is also a member of the Council on Southeast Asian Studies and a research fellow at the MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies.

Courses and Seminars

Undergraduate

  • SOCY/ER&M/WGSS/EVST 127 Health and Illness in Social Context

  • SOCY 160 Methods of Inquiry

  • SOCY 351/545 Race, Medicine, and Technology