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Faculty Publication: Cindy Sousa, Associate Professor of Social Work

June 3, 2019

Geopolitics, Political Violence, and Global Health: Ethical Obligations for Professionals Acting Within Wars and Conflict Settings

Author: Cindy Sousa

Publication Type: Chapter in a book

Source: Routledge Handbook on the Politics of Global Health

Abstract: Global public health now regularly concerns itself with the health consequences of political violence. Yet, political violence does not only cause direct outcomes measurable in mortality and morbidity, it also undermines the supports that underlie population health by further weakening vulnerable public health infrastructure. In so doing, political violence creates conditions that are exceedingly favorable to the neoliberal agenda, particularly the priorities of privatization and increased dependence on outside “expert” assistance. While it might be unwitting, global health efforts may be complicit with this process of taking advantage of the destabilized state to insert the private sector, a process Klein (2007) refers to as "disaster capitalism." In this chapter, I examine the relationships between political violence, neoliberalism, and global public health. I end by highlighting how our profession must support sovereignty and public health infrastructure in conflict and post-conflict settings through emphasizing advocacy, collective self-determination, and social justice.

Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research