Pathologies of power: rethinking health and human rights.

1999 American Journal of Public Health 217 citations

Abstract

The field of health and human rights has grown quickly, but its boundaries have yet to be traced. Fifty-one years after the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, consensus regarding the most promising directions for the future is lacking; however, outcome-oriented assessments lead us to question approaches that rely solely on recourse to formal legal and civil rights. Similarly unpromising are approaches that rely overmuch on appeals to governments: careful study reveals that state power has been responsible for most human rights violations and that most violations are embedded in "structural violence"--social and economic inequities that determine who will be at risk for assaults and who will be shielded. This article advances an agenda for research and action grounded in the struggle for social and economic rights, an agenda suited to public health and medicine, whose central contributions to future progress in human rights will be linked to the equitable distribution of the fruits of scientific advancement. Such an approach is in keeping with the Universal Declaration but runs counter to several of the reigning ideologies of public health, including those favoring efficacy over equity.

Keywords

Human rightsDeclarationRight to healthEquity (law)Political sciencePublic healthIdeologyInternational human rights lawSocial equalityLawLaw and economicsSociologyMedicinePoliticsNursing

MeSH Terms

Global HealthHealth Services AccessibilityHuman RightsHumansInternationalityMoral ObligationsOrganizational ObjectivesPowerPsychologicalProfessional MisconductPublic HealthResearchSocial Problems

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Publication Info

Year
1999
Type
article
Volume
89
Issue
10
Pages
1486-1496
Citations
217
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

217
OpenAlex
11
Influential
144
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Cite This

Paul Farmer (1999). Pathologies of power: rethinking health and human rights.. American Journal of Public Health , 89 (10) , 1486-1496. https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.89.10.1486

Identifiers

DOI
10.2105/ajph.89.10.1486
PMID
10511828
PMCID
PMC1508789

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%