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What is Structural Violence

Handbook of Research on Aestheticization of Violence, Horror, and Power
A type of violence that might include physical or psychological elements or both and depending on the context might operate latently or manifestly, committed systematically against a certain group of people (or just a member of certain group of people) to discriminate and oppress for creating and sustaining global, national, local and domestic economic, social and cultural inequalities.
Published in Chapter:
Context and Space as the Tools to Legitimize and Produce Violence: Broadening Hassan's Perspective on East-West Dichotomy
Ahmet Faruk Çeçen (Ondokuz Mayıs University, Turkey)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-4655-0.ch016
Abstract
Hassan thought the reason of the never-ending clash between East and West is the difference between their varied time perception. Albeit accepting many of Hassan's claims, the author believes the difference between their time perception cannot be the sole reason of the conflict. Examining the conflict through power relations and seeing violence as a tool of it, the study aimed to show how structural violence helps sustaining global, national, local, and domestic economic, social, and cultural inequalities. As far as we know, the legal structures that sustained state-mandated overt discrimination have been dismantled in the West, meaning the equal treatment of all races and religions under the law. However, it is obvious that there are structural obstacles preventing the law from being practiced the way it is intended. Through the concepts ‘context' and ‘space', the researcher will try to explain how discriminative practices are sustained, produced, legitimized, which pave the way for the conflicts to go on (e.g., East and West).
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More Results
The Transformational Change Agent Equation: Reziliency of Native American Women in Leadership Roles in Higher Education
Violence inherent in colonized systems, like education; used to threaten BIPOC into subordination or inaction to prevent transformational change. The Native American experience within American education has largely been one of assimilation, violence, and oppression.
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The Contribution of Tourism to Peacebuilding Processes: The Case of African Peace Parks
Violence as a result of the structure. An inequality of opportunity that limits the potential of the human being.
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Language, Social Pragmatic Communication, and Childhood Trauma
The way systems and social structures (e.g., economics, politics) are organized that cause harm to groups of people, and can deny these groups their human rights ( Ortega, Graybill, & Lasch, 2015 ).
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Violence and Voice: A Pragmatic Poetics of University-Community Engagement
Sustained tactics of domination exerted through “percepticide,” forcing people to ignore oppression or violence, and through the mystification of social problems by over-simplifying historical facts and circumstances that give rise to problems.
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