articleCurrent AnthropologyMay 24, 2004Closed access

An Anthropology of Structural Violence

Harvard University

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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. 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. The emergence and persistence of these epidemics in Haiti, where they are the leading causes of youngadult death, is rooted in the enduring effects of European expansion in the New World and in the slavery and racism with which it was associated.…

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2,149
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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biosocial theory
  • Poverty
  • Sociology
  • Social inequality
  • Applied anthropology
  • Racism
  • Sociocultural anthropology
  • Inequality
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
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