Samantha Vortherms on Manipulating Authoritarian Citizenship: Security, Development, and Local Membership in China
Samantha Vortherms on Manipulating Authoritarian Citizenship: Security, Development, and Local Membership in China
Thursday, February 27, 202512:00 PM - 1:15 PM (Pacific)
Philippines Room, Encina Hall (3rd floor), Room C330
616 Jane Stanford Way, Stanford, CA 94305
![Flyer for the seminar "Manipulating Authoritarian Citizenship: Security, Development, and Local Membership in China," with a portrait of speaker Samantha Vortherms.](https://fsi9-prod.s3.us-west-1.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/styles/680x378/public/2025-01/cp_vortherms_2025feb27.jpg?itok=v3KFgIJZ)
Join Stanford's Shorenstein APARC China Program as we welcome Assistant Professor Samantha Vortherms from U.C. Irvine to discuss the findings from her new book, Manipulating Authoritarian Citizenship: Security, Development, and Local Membership in China (Stanford University Press, 2024). In the book, Professor Vortherms examines the crucial case of China—where internal citizenship regimes control who can and cannot become a local citizen through the household registration system (hukou)—and uncovers how autocrats use such institutions to create particularistic membership in citizenship.
![Samantha Vortherms, UC Irvine](https://fsi9-prod.s3.us-west-1.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/styles/250xauto/public/2024-12/vorthermsheadshot.jpg?itok=gB6KJBBD)
Samantha Vortherms is an Assistant Professor at University of California, Irvine's Department of Political Science. She’s also a faculty affiliate at UCI’s Long U.S.-China Institute; Philosophy, Political Science, and Economic program; and a Non-resident Scholar at UC San Diego’s 21st Century China Center. She received her Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 2017 and was a Shorenstein Postdoctoral Fellow in Contemporary Asia at Stanford University’s APARC. From 2014-2016, she was a Visiting Research Fellow at the National School of Development's China Center for Health Economics Research at Peking University.