02434nas a2200325 4500000000100000008004100001260001800042653002100060653001300081653001700094653002300111653001500134653001500149653002300164653003400187653000900221653001300230653002000243653001200263653002900275653001300304653000800317100001700325700001500342245005000357856015900407300001200566520150500578020002502083 d bElsevier Inc.10aEthnic cleansing10aGenocide10aHuman rights10aIndigenous peoples10aInternment10aLand mines10aPolitical violence10aPosttraumatic stress disorder10aRape10arefugees10aSocial violence10aTorture10aTruth and reconciliation10aViolence10aWar1 aD. Schneider1 aM. Turshen00aPolitical and Social Violence: Health Effects uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85069882753&doi=10.1016%2fB978-0-444-52272-6.00194-X&partnerID=40&md5=d064078c0b994d1ee34dde763b01645b a623-6303 aPolitical and social violence are part of a typology that includes cultural, economic, and structural violence. Social or interpersonal violence includes discrimination, domestic violence, rape, and murder. Economic or structural violence keeps populations or subgroups entrenched in poverty or limited in their ability to improve their working and living conditions. Cultural violence prevents people from perpetuating their tangible or intangible cultural heritage, including language and customs. Political violence includes denial of citizenship or representation, wrongful detention or enslavement, forced eviction, and statelessness. Governmental or quasi-governmental structures or violent environments can encourage political violence by looking away from criminal activity, degrading the environment, making guns versus butter choices for the economy, or engaging in detention or armed conflict. Political violence can be ranked according to its lethality, with genocide the most deadly, followed by international wars, internal wars, and terrorism. The health effects of political violence are extensive: increased rates of death, disability, adverse birth outcomes, infectious and chronic diseases, and mental illness. The impact of political and social violence on the health care system and infrastructure can be extensive and difficult to reverse. Violent environments can be healed, but healing requires accountability and reconciliation, as well as a commitment to basic human rights. a9780444522726 (ISBN)