"Women have always been healers, the wise women. Barbara Katz Rothman shows how medicine has taken over the gates of life, the care of our bodies, and what has cost communities and cultures around the world." - Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Natural Causes "After the post-colonial critique of empire and the Foucauldian critique of biopower, Katz Rothman exposes the insidious reach of the biomedical empire, a global industry that has appropriated our capacity to care, commodified our sense of well-being, and seized full control over the beginning and end of life. Essential sociological reading for anyone interested in rescuing critical medical sociology from the clutches of right-wing populism." - Finn Bowring, Cardiff University "This book identifies the Biomedical Empire as the global leviathan monopolizing control of medicalized/industrialized healthcare, a truly imperial system defined by the bottom-line logic of 21st-century corporate- and finance-dominated global capitalism. This short, provocative account wonderfully illustrates how all this top-down-controlled machinery impacts intimate human events like birth, death, and the lonely terror of COVID-19 pandemic victims." - David Smith, University of California, Irvine "This work is a crisp critique of biomedicine which shows hope for a way out of the Biomedical Empire wherein the public, health and care may be infused back into public health." - Meghna Roy, Sociology of Health and Illness "While the book primarily draws on examples from the United States and the author's own lived experience, Rothman makes the case that the biomedical empire is transnational and transcends the nation-state. Unfolding over ten chapters, the book contributes to existing work in the sociology of medicine and scholarship on empire in contemporary contexts." - Durgesh Solanki, Journal of World-Systems Research "This book provides a compelling argument that only by naming the Biomedical Empire and recognizing biomedical citizenship can we begin to transform societies to act on the fundamental determinants of health." - Crystal Adams, Contemporary Sociology "Taken together... this book is a powerful damnation of contemporary health care systems, particularly in the United States where every service is itemized and billed." - Jill Thistlethwaite, Fulbright Chronicles "In a nutshell, [Katz Rothman's] book is a must-have not just for scholars and researchers interested in medical sociology but also for anybody seeking to familiarize themselves with the biomedical empire. Anyone who has visited a hospital or used biomedical services will be able to connect to the book. As a result, practically everyone should read the book." - Pankaj Singh, H-Death "[The Biomedical Empire is] an invitation to us all to rethink how we theorize the local and the global, class and power, and our subjection to persistent, escalating inequality worldwide." - Lenore Manderson, American Journal of Sociology "Barbara Katz Rothman brings a wealth of experience and knowledge of medical sociology to this Stanford Briefs book, discussing how the COVID-19 pandemic experiences highlighted the expanding presence of what she calls theBiomedical Empire. Insight from medical sociology is particularly valuable, as it allows for complex social and medical processes to be situated in broader political and social contexts, without shying away from the complexity that comes with bringing a plethora of variables together. The author skillfully weaves together personal experiences with insight from across a spectrum of works and disciplines, going beyond medical sociology to include political science and economics." - Preslava Stoeva, H-Diplo "Even in such a brief work, The Biomedical Empire makes a provocative case for understanding biomedicine as imperialism, paves the way for a productive, critical, research agenda on the global power of biomedicine, and provides an entry point for students to structural and system-level arguments." - Catherine Z. Worsnop, H-Diplo