Skip to content Accessibility statement

Gender and Family for the Eugenic Sterilisation in Japan after World War II

Seminar

Event date
Wednesday 4 March 2026, 5.30pm
Location
V/N/123, Vanbrugh College, Campus West, University of York (Map)
Admission
Free admission, booking required

Event details

Join us for research seminars hosted by the Department of History with a selection of visiting academics, alongside University of York researchers. All students and staff are very welcome.

A zoom link will be made available for distance learning PhD students on request. Please contact Dr Purba Hossain or Stephanie Mawson if you have any questions. You can view the full schedule for the semester here

Speaker: Dr Aya Homei (University of Manchester)

Abstract: This seminar examines the role of gender and family in involuntary sterilisation in Japan after World War II under the Eugenic Protection Law (1948–1996). It explores how the Japanese government institutionalised involuntary sterilisation as a health policy within the specific social and political context of postwar Japan. The seminar then analyses the medical diagnoses used to justify eugenic sterilisation, showing how gender shaped medical discourse by framing victims’ sexuality as a threat to social order. Finally, it examines the role of the family in both the production and implementation of medical knowledge, highlighting the agency of victims’ families in the enforcement of the law. Through this presentation, I aim to contextualise the Japanese Supreme Court’s decision in July 2024, which ruled that eugenic sterilisation was unconstitutional.