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De Gruyter Handbook of Structural Violence

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Structural violence as an analytical term emerged in the late 1960s to characterize the harm and injustice of poverty and other forms of inequality and the oppressive institutions and social struct...
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  • 15 November 2026
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Structural violence as an analytical term emerged in the late 1960s to characterize the harm and injustice of poverty and other forms of inequality and the oppressive institutions and social structures that cause the injustice and inequality. The term goes beyond physical violence to show how social structures and institutions limit people’s lives. In the broadest sense, it is intended to capture the manifold ways they stunt or inhibit people's potential. Structural violence can be seen explicitly or implicitly as a point of departure for contemporary studies of homelessness and malnutrition, the ongoing predations of neo-colonialism and neoliberalism, the harms of institutionalized racism and gender inequality, but also the psycho-social toll of living in fear.

This handbook brings together contributions from a range of fields to provide an overview of how researchers, theorists, advocates, policymakers and practitioners use, critique, and expand upon the concept of structural violence. It provides a space for analysis and conceptualization that bridges traditional divides between researchers and practitioners and between academic disciplines, and shows how the notion of structural violence has been crucial in establishing fields such as Peace Studies, and influencing others, such as health policy.

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Price: $141.99
Pages: 580
Publisher: De Gruyter
Imprint: De Gruyter
Publication Date: 15 November 2026
ISBN: 9783111519272
Format: Hardcover
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Joshua M. Price, Toronto Metropolitan University, Kanada.

Alexandra S. Moore, Binghamton University, USA.



Joshua M. Price is Professor of Criminology at Toronto Metropolitan University. He writes on structural and institutional violence, race and gender violence, incarceration and life after incarceration. Josh also studies the role of language in the colonization of the Americas.

Alexandra S. Moore is Professor of English and Co-Director of the Human Rights Institute at Binghamton University, State University of New York. She studies human rights in literary and visual studies, and she has co-edited nine volumes and authored two monographs and numerous articles.