Marginalization Essay

1105 Words3 Pages

Marginalization and Privilege in the Structural Violence of Modern Society Author, physician, and anthropologist Paul Farmer focuses on structural violence in his book Infections and Inequalities. Structural violence is not only today’s social and economic inequality, but also oppression and exploitation that is ongoing and has been occurring for generations. Current programs to alleviate inequality are important but many people don’t consider that marginalized people are not only marginalized today, but their families have been marginalized for centuries. People argue that it has been a certain number of years since slavery and the civil rights, and are opposed to the continuation of programs to address disparities. Opposition to social programs such as welfare is widespread in America. But structural violence is not just about today’s staggering, undeniable, and increasing inequality, but about centuries of marginalization, that cannot be simply repaired. Structural violence is the exploitation and manipulation of poor or victimized people by powerful people and companies. A person’s lack of resources, both a cause and an effect of structural violence, is not only a lack of money, but also whether a government’s or health provider’s decides to make interventions available to some but not others, or to focus on prevention at the sake of cure. For example, in class we watched a film about first the unethical and criminal Tuskegee experiments, in which doctors watched the progression of syphilis in black men in Alabama without informing the men that they had syphilis and that they could treat it, when they could. Human rights lawyer Terry Cullingsworth states that, “The fact that they went to Guatemala is partly at least due to t... ... middle of paper ... ...e ever at odds. Disease risk factors are never culture. Disease is not desired by a society. Paul Farmer writes more about structural violence and disease. He says that in fact, disease is the embodiment of structural violence. The infectious diseases written about in his book, such as HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, are primarily caused by structural violence, and that this has been ignored by doctors and anthropologists. It is a popular American ideal to value choice as freedom, and to police the rest of the world but not help its suffering. Americans believe that we spend too much on foreign aid, and that we should focus our efforts on domestic problems, even in regard to health outcomes. However, although we place value on our borders, disease has no regard to borders, and disease can spread among our poor just as easily as it does among the poor in other nations.

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