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  2. Feb 16, 2021 · Structural violence is particularly prominent in medical anthropology, including the anthropology of global health. It has been used to analyze a variety of topics, including but not limited to substance abuse, migrant health, child mortality, women's health, and infectious disease.

  3. An Anthropology of Structural Violence on JSTOR. Paul Farmer, An Anthropology of Structural Violence, Current Anthropology, Vol. 45, No. 3 (June 2004), pp. 305-325.

  4. This analysis contributes to conceptual clarity and mutual understanding of the usage, application and significance of structural violence across health disciplines and provides a strong foundation for continued concept development and operationalization.

  5. This essay, based on over a decade of research in rural Haiti, draws on the work of Sidney Mintz and others who have linked the interpretive project of modern anthropology to a historical understanding of the largescale social and economic structures in which affliction is embedded.

    • Paul Farmer
    • 2004
  6. Projects: Common Book. Mountains Beyond Mountains. Explaining Difference: “Culture,” “Structural Violence,” and Medical Anthropology. By Professor Janelle S. Taylor, Anthropology, University of Washington. Email: jstaylor@u.washington.edu. What You Can Learn from Exploring This Topic.

  7. This article examines the interrelationships among structural violence, poverty and social suffering. It begins with a vignette from Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, that puts a face on structural violence.

  8. An Anthropology of Structural Violence. Current Anthropology, 45 (3), 305–317. Abstract. Any thorough understanding of the modern epidemics of AIDS and tuberculosis in Haiti or elsewhere in the postcolonial world requires a thorough knowledge of history and political economy.

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