About me

Ayesha Khan, Ph.D., (any pronouns) is a divergent Infectious Diseases Scientist, Germ doctor, grassroots organizer, writer, astrobiologist & educator discovering the science of social justice, decolonization, collectivism, neurodiversity & liberation.

Ayesha’s art activism breaks down complex scientific and geopolitical concepts, with innovative pedagogy, making them accessible to everyone. Ayesha is building abolitionist science- a novel field that deploys research-driven scientific strategies to arm individuals and communities with tools to abolish capitalism and all global oppressive carceral systems while simultaneously building equitable socialist systems. This work builds on foundations laid by scholars of global abolitionist movements.

*Opinions shared on this and other platforms are my own and not the views of my employer*

Rooted in community, through abolitionist science

  • Breaking down complex concepts into tangible praxis we can implement in our daily life & relationships.

  • Building critical mass for the revolution by decentralizing resources & making the tools of liberation accessible to all

  • Mobilizing to save & sustain our ecosystem and build a world where everyone has the right to life, safety, & care

  • B.Sc. in Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics + Global Studies and Public Policy | University of California, Los Angeles- 2015

    Ph.D. in Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology specializing in Antimicrobial Resistance, Diagnostics, Personalized Medicine and Microbial Genomics | University of Texas Health Science Center and MD Anderson Cancer Center | Advisor: Cesar A. Arias, MD, Ph.D., FIDSA- aug. 2015 - mar. 2020

    Postdoctoral Fellow in Infectious Diseases | Center for Antimicrobial Resistance and Microbial Genomics, UTHealth- apr. 2020 - jun.2021

    Visiting Faculty in Infectious Diseases | Instituto de Ciencias e Innovación en Medicina (ICIM), Facultad de Medicina, Clínica Alemana, Universidad del Desarrollo | Santiago, Chile- sept. 2021 - jun. 2022

  • Clinical Microbiology Fellow | Vanderbilt University Medical Center | Nashville, TN- jun. 2022 - now

    *Opinions shared on this and other platforms are my own and not the views of my employer*

  • Diagnostics Committee Member, Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)

    Ambassador, American Society for Microbiology (ASM)

    Steering Committee Member, U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights (USCPR), 2019-2021

    Board Member, Diversity Alumni Advisory Committee, University of California, Los Angeles

    Board Member, University Muslim Alumni Association (UMAA) at UCLA

    Co-founder and Board Member, March for Science, Houston, 2017-2021

    Steering Committee Member, National Students for Justice in Palestine (NSJP), 2015-2019

    Editor-in-Chief, National SJP Newsletter, 2016-2019

    President, American Society for Microbiology Texas Medical Center Chapter, 2017-2021

    President, Association of Minority Biomedical Researchers (AMBR), 2018-2020

    Project Director, Incarcerated Youth Tutorial Project (IYTP), UCLA, 2012-2015

    External Affairs Director | Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Committee, Students for Justice in Palestine, UCLA, 2012-2015

    Co-Founder, Chai Talks at UCLA (Advocacy organization for social issues in South Asia), 2014

    Co-Founder, SWANA-LA, 2013-2015

Hi friends, thank you for being in this community-building space!

My name is Ayesha. I created abolitionist science after a lifetime of searching for & not finding resources for my community’s liberation that bridge science & social justice. This work is borne out of an absence of a dedicated field of study that leverages basic science data-driven research to prove the validity of abolitionist, leftist political solutions to global oppression. I’ve dedicated my life to building the foundations of abolitionist science & translating theory into tangible praxis for anyone to apply in their daily life & relationships and scale up to ultimately transform our communities as a whole.

By traditional academic training, I’m a “germ doctor”, i.e. I specialize in infectious diseases- both as a clinician in patient care focusing on the diagnosis of infections and as a basic & translational scientist researching antibiotic resistant superbugs. Coming from many marginalized backgrounds & due to my lifelong dedication to community, I’m a grassroots organizer driving long-term sustainable strategy in a few national/ global movements. By passion, I’m an educator & mentor working with people to catalyze their unlearning & radicalization journey by pushing cognitive dissonance in a bold space defined by compassion using decolonized psychology. I help people unplug from the matrix of dogma, social constructs, arbitrary norms & binaries. By creative instinct, I’m an artist & a writer using art activism as a tool to communicate complex scientific, geopolitical & historical concepts in an accessible manner.

Why I do this

  • My journey

    I’m a Siddi (Afro-Indian), Queer, divergent, non-binary, immigrant born into a Muslim-Hindu household in rural Bangalore, India, with my primary roots in the coastal town of Bengre, Mangalore, Karnataka. Our family emigrated due to the threat of religious communal violence & relocated every few years. I grew up across several countries from Russia to Saudi Arabia, with most time spent in the South West Asia & North Africa region. As a third culture child, “where is home” is a complex & puzzling question. Home is never about nations or borders. Home is where community is & that can be built anywhere.

    The earthy scent of the first monsoon. Cream on top of fresh milk. Flickering candlelight while playing the board game “Ludo” during power outages. These are all fond moments of my childhood in rural Bangalore, India.

  • The motivation

    Only now do I realize that my community’s joy was often a resilient coping mechanism. Fragmented memories include us boiling all our water, waiting in long lines outside public clinics for vaccines & relatives passing away from fevers and colds. Today, peering through the lens of my scientific training and grassroots activism, I see that infectious diseases were a big part of my life: macroscopic inequity manifested through microscopic germs. In the Global South- infectious diseases are still the #1 cause of death. My fervor & curiosity to understand the molecular workings of the universe & love for community motivate my science. My long-term goal is to decolonize academic medicine & biomedical research by pushing for transformation in graduate medical education & increased medicine-wide focus on root causes of negative health outcomes- systemic oppression, inequity & capitalist state-violence.

  • The approach

    Praxis- the practical application of political theory in daily life- is my approach to liberation. We practice the beliefs that enable oppressive structures everyday- like hierarchies, power dynamics, transactional relationships, individualism, a culture of punishment / competition/ isolation & loneliness, policing other people, reducing everything into binaries of good/bad or us/ them, hyper self-reliance, arbitrary social norms to be perceived as “successful”, grind & productivity culture, etc. We are socialized since birth to abide by arbitrary social constructs & norms that force us to internalize capitalism as a law of nature & most never question their beliefs or way of life. Capitalism makes all injustice profitable. I work with people to systematically dismantle their social & mental cages & practice everyday abolition, collectivism, anarchism & socialism. We build macro systems of justice by scaling up the “micro”.