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Pathologies
of Power Health, Human Rights, and the New War on the Poor
by Paul Farmer
University of California Press (April, 2003)
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praise | description | excerpt | author
PRAISE
"This is an angry and a hopeful book, and, like everything Dr. Farmer
has written, it has both passion and authority. Pathologies of Power is
an eloquent plea for a working definition of human rights that would not
neglect the most basic rights of all: food, shelter and health. This plea
has special potency because it comes from Dr. Farmer, a person who has
proven that the dream of universal and comprehensive human rights is possible,
and who has brought food, shelter, health, and hope to some of the poorest
people on this earth."--Tracy Kidder, author of The Soul of a New
Machine and Home Town
"Farmer's brilliance and charisma leap from the pages of his book.
He challenges us to face the urgent theoretical and political challenges
of the twenty-first century by linking structural violence to embodied
social suffering and in the process calls for a new definition of human
rights. Once this book is out, we will no longer be able to remain complacently--or
rather, complicitly--on the sidelines."--Philippe Bourgois, author
of In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in El Barrio
"A passionate critique of conventional biomedical ethics by one of
the world's leading physician-anthropologists and public intellectuals.
Farmer's on-the-ground analysis of the relentless march of the AIDS epidemic
and multi-drug resistant tuberculosis among the imprisoned and the sick-poor
of the world illuminates the pathologies of a world economy that has lost
its soul."--Nancy Scheper-Hughes , author of Death without Weeping:
the Violence of Everyday Life in Brazil
"In his compelling book, Farmer captures the central dilemma of our
times--the increasing disparities of health and well-being within and among
societies. While all member countries of the United Nations denounce the
gross violations of human rights perpetrated by those who torture, murder,
or imprison without due process, the insidious violations of human rights
due to structural violence involving the denial of economic opportunity,
decent housing, or access to health care and education are commonly ignored.
Pathologies of Power makes a powerful case that our very humanity is threatened
by our collective failure to end these abuses."--Robert S. Lawrence,
President of Physicians for Human Rights and Edyth Schoenrich Professor
of Preventive Medicine at the Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns
Hopkins University
"Farmer has given us that most rare of books: one that opens both
our minds and hearts. It stands as a model of engaged scholarship and an
urgent call for social scientists to forsake their cushy disregard for
human rights at home and abroad."--Loïc Wacquant, author of Prisons
of Poverty
"Paul Farmer is an original: a powerful writer, an insightful theorist,
and a human rights activist on behalf of the health needs of some of the
poorest and most excluded people on the planet. Pathologies of Power brings
together all his strengths, as a thinker and an activist. Every health
worker, human rights teacher, and government official who seeks to improve
the health status and life chances of their fellow human beings simply
must read this book."--Michael Ignatieff, author of Human Rights as
Politics and Idolatry
DESCRIPTION
Pathologies of Power uses harrowing stories of life--and death--in
extreme situations to interrogate our understanding of human rights. Paul
Farmer, a physician and anthropologist with twenty years of experience
working in Haiti, Peru, and Russia, argues that promoting the social and
economic rights of the world's poor is the most important human rights
struggle of our times. With passionate eyewitness accounts from the prisons
of Russia and the beleaguered villages of Haiti and Chiapas, this book
links the lived experience of individual victims to a broader analysis
of structural violence. Farmer challenges conventional thinking within
human rights circles and exposes the relationships between political and
economic injustice on one hand, and the suffering and illness of the powerless
on the other.
BRIEF EXCERPT
From the Foreword:
"Paul Farmer is a great doctor with massive experience working against
the hardest of diseases in the most adverse circumstances, and, at the
same time, he is a proficient and insightful anthropologist. Farmer's knowledge
of maladies such as AIDS and drug-resistant tuberculosis, which he fights
on behalf of his indigent patients, is hard to match. But what is particularly
relevant in appreciating the contribution of this powerful book is that
Farmer is a visionary analyst who looks beyond the details of fragmentary
explanations to seek an integrated understanding of a complex reality."--Amartya
Sen, Nobel Laureate, Economics
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Paul Farmer is Professor of Medical Anthropology at Harvard Medical School
and Founding Director of Partners In Health. Among his books are Infections
and Inequalities: The Modern Plagues (California, 1999), The Uses of Haiti
(1994), and AIDS and Accusation: Haiti and the Geography of Blame (California,
1992). Farmer is the winner of a MacArthur Foundation "genius" award
and the Margaret Mead Award for his contributions to public anthropology.
He recently held the Blaise Pascal International Chair at the College de
France. Amartya Sen, whose work challenges conventional market-driven economic
paradigms, is the winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in economics. He teaches
at Trinity College, Cambridge University.
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