All Thinkers

Paul Farmer

Paul Farmer (1959-2022) was an American physician, anthropologist, and global health activist. He was born in North Adams, Massachusetts, and grew up in modest and at times difficult circumstances, living for a period on a bus and then on a boat in Florida with his large family. He studied anthropology and medicine at Harvard University. In 1983, while still a student, he began working in Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, and never stopped. He co-founded Partners in Health in 1987, an organisation that has built health systems in Haiti, Rwanda, Lesotho, Liberia, Mexico, Peru, Kazakhstan, Sierra Leone, and elsewhere, demonstrating that high-quality healthcare could be delivered to the poorest communities on earth. He was a professor at Harvard Medical School, spent much of his time in Haiti, and travelled constantly between his field work, his Harvard obligations, and advocacy in international health policy. He died in his sleep in Rwanda in 2022 at the age of sixty-two, after a lifetime of working eighteen-hour days while sleeping in basic conditions and eating simply to remain as close as possible to the people he served.

Origin
United States / Haiti / Rwanda
Lifespan
1959-2022
Era
20th-21st century
Subjects
Global Health Medicine Medical Anthropology Social Justice Infectious Disease
Why They Matter

Farmer matters because he challenged one of the most entrenched assumptions in global health: that high-quality healthcare was too expensive to deliver in poor countries and that resource-limited settings required a lower standard of care. He showed, through practical work in Haiti and elsewhere, that this assumption was wrong. What was really too expensive was continuing to allow preventable deaths from treatable diseases. He also developed the concept of structural violence, building on the work of Virchow and liberation theologians, to explain why poor people were sick: not because of bad luck or bad choices but because the structures of political and economic power systematically denied them the conditions necessary for health. And he demonstrated, through decades of concrete work, that genuine care for the poorest people in the world was not only morally required but practically achievable.

Key Ideas
1
Structural violence causes disease
Farmer developed the concept of structural violence to explain why poor people get sick and die at rates vastly higher than rich people. Structural violence is the harm caused not by direct individual violence but by the structures of society: the economic systems, political arrangements, historical legacies, and social hierarchies that systematically deprive some people of the resources and conditions necessary for health. A child who dies of a treatable disease because their family cannot afford treatment is a victim of structural violence: not of any individual's malice but of a system that assigns unequal value to different lives. Naming this as violence, rather than as unfortunate circumstance, is itself a political and moral act.
2
The poor deserve the same standard of care as the rich
Farmer consistently argued against the idea that resource-limited settings required a lower standard of medical care. The standard argument in global health was that expensive treatments, such as antiretroviral therapy for HIV, could not be delivered in poor countries because they were too costly and required too much infrastructure. Farmer rejected this as a moral failure masquerading as a practical constraint. He showed that high-quality care could be delivered in Haiti and Rwanda with appropriate organisation and commitment. The question was not whether the poor deserved good care but whether the global community was willing to invest in providing it.
3
Building systems, not just delivering care
A central principle of Farmer's work through Partners in Health was that sustainable improvement in health required building health systems rather than delivering episodic care. A visiting doctor who treats patients but leaves when their mission ends may help individuals but does not change the underlying capacity of the community to maintain health. Partners in Health worked to train local healthcare workers, build facilities, create supply chains for medicines, establish referral systems, and develop the institutional infrastructure that would allow good healthcare to continue after foreign volunteers left. This emphasis on system-building over emergency response was one of his most important practical contributions.
Key Quotations
"The idea that some lives matter less is the root of all that is wrong with the world."
— Commonly attributed to Farmer
This statement captures the moral foundation of Farmer's entire project. The premise that poor, Black, or Haitian lives matter less than wealthy, white, or American ones explains why the world's resources are not organised to prevent the deaths of the poorest people, even when the means of prevention are available and affordable. Farmer insisted that this premise was not just practically wrong but morally intolerable, and that the obligation to provide good healthcare to the poorest people was not charity but justice: an obligation that arose from the equal value of all human lives.
"When I talk about my patients, I want people to feel the weight of their lives."
— Various interviews
Farmer is describing his strategy of using individual stories to make abstract statistics about global health inequality concrete and emotionally real. He was a gifted writer who could make a reader feel the particular weight of a particular person's suffering and death in a way that mortality statistics could not. He believed that genuine moral response to the suffering of others required not only intellectual understanding but emotional connection, and that the stories of individual patients were the most powerful tool for creating that connection. This connects to Dante's and Eco's arguments about the unique capacity of narrative to convey truths that abstractions cannot.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Health Literacy When discussing global health inequality and its causes
How to introduce
Present the contrast: in wealthy countries, most people who get tuberculosis, HIV, or malaria survive. In poor countries, far more die. Ask: why? Is it biology? Is it individual behaviour? Introduce Farmer's structural violence framework: the difference is primarily explained by the social conditions and the level of healthcare investment. Ask: what does this tell us about the nature of global health inequality? Is it inevitable, or is it a product of specific political and economic arrangements that could be changed?
Citizenship When discussing obligations beyond national borders
How to introduce
Introduce Farmer's challenge: if a child in Haiti is dying of a treatable disease, and you have the resources to help treat them, do you have an obligation to do so? After discussion, connect to his practical model: Partners in Health demonstrated that this obligation could be met through well-designed health systems. Ask: what are the limits of this argument? Does wealthy-country obligation extend to providing the same standard of healthcare available in wealthy countries? What would this require?
Further Reading

Tracy Kidder's Mountains Beyond Mountains (2003, Random House) is the most accessible and engaging account of Farmer's life and work, written by a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who spent time with Farmer in Haiti and Boston. It is essential reading for understanding both the man and his ideas. For a short overview: Partners in Health maintains accessible resources at pih.org that describe their work and the principles behind it.

Key Ideas
1
Accompaniment: being with the patient
Farmer developed the concept of accompaniment to describe the relationship between Partners in Health and the communities it worked with. Accompaniment means being with someone on a difficult journey: not directing from above, not parachuting in with solutions, but walking alongside. In practical terms it meant providing community health workers from within the community who accompanied patients through the healthcare system, ensuring that treatment was completed, that patients were supported through difficulties, and that the complex social obstacles to maintaining health were addressed alongside the purely medical ones. Accompaniment embodied the respect for patients as full human beings that Farmer insisted was essential to genuine healthcare.
2
Liberation theology and the preferential option for the poor
Farmer was deeply influenced by liberation theology, the Latin American Catholic tradition that argues for a preferential option for the poor: the theological and moral position that justice requires prioritising the needs and perspective of the most marginalised. He applied this not as a religious doctrine but as a practical and analytical framework: when designing health systems, start from the needs of the poorest and most vulnerable rather than from the convenience of providers or the preferences of funders. A health system designed from the perspective of the sickest and most deprived patients will serve all patients better than one designed for the majority.
3
History matters: the political economy of disease
Farmer was insistent that understanding why Haiti was poor, and therefore why Haitians were sick, required understanding the history that had made Haiti poor. Haiti was the first country in the Western Hemisphere to abolish slavery, through a revolution in 1804, and was made to pay an enormous indemnity to France for the loss of its slave-owning property. It suffered repeated military interventions by the United States. Its political institutions were repeatedly destabilised by foreign interference. Its poverty was not the natural condition of a small Caribbean island: it was the product of specific historical processes of exploitation and interference. This historical analysis of the political economy of disease is one of Farmer's most important contributions.
Key Quotations
"Mountains beyond mountains: there is always more suffering to address."
— Title of Tracy Kidder's biography, inspired by a Haitian proverb
This Haitian proverb, which became the title of Tracy Kidder's biography of Farmer, captures both the scale of the challenge he faced and his response to it. There is always more suffering, more disease, more poverty than any individual or organisation can address. This could be grounds for despair or for limiting one's ambitions. Farmer's response was neither: he worked as hard as he possibly could on the problems in front of him, without pretending that his efforts would solve everything. The mountains beyond mountains were not a reason to stop climbing but a description of the nature of the work.
"Medical anthropology and epidemiology together suggested that social structure matters as much as individual behaviour in explaining why some people get sick and others do not."
— Infections and Inequalities, 1999
Farmer is making his central analytical argument: individual behaviour, while relevant, is not the primary explanation for why poor people get sick more than rich people. The structures of society, the political and economic arrangements that determine who has access to clean water, adequate food, decent housing, and healthcare, explain far more of the variation in health outcomes than individual choices. This argument, which combines the insights of medical anthropology and epidemiology, provides the analytical foundation for the concept of structural violence and for the argument that addressing health inequality requires structural change rather than only individual behaviour change.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Systems Thinking When examining why global health problems are structural rather than individual
How to introduce
Introduce the structural violence framework. Ask: draw a map of the factors that determine whether a child in a poor country survives a preventable disease. Include: income of family, distance to healthcare, cost of medicines, quality of the healthcare facility, training of healthcare workers, supply chain for medicines, political stability, history of colonial extraction. Ask: which of these are individual factors and which are structural? What would be needed to change the structural factors? Connect to Virchow's argument that medicine is a social science.
Ethical Thinking When examining global justice and the value of human lives
How to introduce
Present Farmer's central moral question: does the suffering and premature death of poor people in poor countries matter as much as that of wealthy people in wealthy countries? Ask students to answer honestly, then ask: does how we allocate global healthcare resources answer this question? Compare spending on diseases that primarily affect wealthy countries with spending on diseases that primarily affect poor countries. Ask: is the current allocation consistent with a genuine belief in equal human worth?
Research Skills When examining the relationship between history, politics, and health data
How to introduce
Apply Farmer's method: take a specific health statistic, such as the under-five mortality rate in Haiti, and ask not only what the number is but why it is what it is. Work through the historical and political factors: the indemnity paid to France, the US military interventions, the political instability, the debt to international financial institutions. Ask: does understanding this history change how you read the statistic? Connect to Ibn Khaldun's argument that to understand the present you must understand the historical processes that produced it.
Further Reading

Farmer's own Infections and Inequalities (1999, University of California Press) is the most accessible of his academic books and develops the structural violence framework. Pathologies of Power (2003, University of California Press) applies the framework to specific cases of health and human rights. For the Haiti context: Laurent Dubois's Haiti: The Aftershocks of History (2012, Metropolitan Books) provides the political and historical background essential to understanding Farmer's analysis.

Key Ideas
1
Drug-resistant tuberculosis and the failure of global health
Farmer's work on drug-resistant tuberculosis in Peru in the 1990s was one of his most important practical and theoretical contributions. The standard international health policy at the time was that treating drug-resistant TB in poor countries was too expensive and too complex. The World Health Organisation recommended a basic treatment protocol that Farmer knew was inadequate for drug-resistant strains and that was creating more resistance by treating patients with drugs to which the bacteria had already developed resistance. He demonstrated that drug-resistant TB could be treated successfully in poor communities, against the consensus of international health bodies, and his evidence eventually changed global policy.
2
The role of community health workers
One of Partners in Health's most important practical innovations was the development of community health worker programmes. Rather than relying entirely on formally trained doctors and nurses, they trained local community members to provide basic healthcare, support patients with complex treatment regimes, and connect communities to the formal health system. Community health workers were not a second-best option when professional staff were unavailable: they were, in many contexts, more effective than formally trained professionals at reaching the most marginalised patients, building trust, and ensuring treatment completion. This model has been widely adopted in global health since Partners in Health demonstrated its effectiveness.
3
Bearing witness: the obligation to speak
Farmer believed that physicians and researchers who encountered preventable suffering had an obligation not only to treat it but to speak about it, to make it visible to those with the power and resources to address it. He wrote extensively for both academic and popular audiences about the patients he saw dying of treatable diseases in Haiti, about the political and economic structures that produced their poverty, and about what would be required to change the situation. His writing was not academic detachment: it was advocacy, using the authority of his medical knowledge and his direct experience to make an argument about what global justice required. This obligation to bear witness connects him to Virchow's physician as the natural attorney of the poor.
Key Quotations
"Haiti is not poor because its people are lazy or because its culture is wrong. Haiti is poor because it has been made poor."
— Various writings and interviews
Farmer is making the same argument that Rodney makes about Africa: poverty is not a natural or cultural condition but the product of specific historical processes of exploitation and extraction. Haiti was made to pay reparations to France for the loss of its enslaved population, suffered repeated military interventions by the United States, and had its political institutions repeatedly destabilised by foreign interference. Understanding why Haitians are poor and sick requires understanding this history, not attributing their condition to laziness, cultural backwardness, or geographical misfortune. This historical and political analysis of poverty is essential to Farmer's approach to global health.
"The only real question is whether suffering and premature death in the developing world matters as much as suffering and premature death in wealthy countries."
— Pathologies of Power, 2003
Farmer is reducing the entire debate about global health priorities to its essential moral question. All the technical arguments about what is and is not feasible in resource-limited settings, about cost-effectiveness, about the limits of international health budgets, ultimately come down to this: do we believe that the suffering and death of poor people in poor countries matters as much as the suffering and death of wealthy people in wealthy countries? If the answer is yes, then the appropriate level of investment in global health is vastly higher than current levels. If the answer is no, or if we act as if it is no, then we are implicitly accepting that some lives matter less than others.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When examining how communities respond to healthcare imposed from outside
How to introduce
Introduce the accompaniment principle: working with communities rather than doing things to them. Ask: why does this distinction matter for healthcare? What goes wrong when healthcare is designed without genuine engagement with the community it serves? Connect to Freire's argument that genuine education must start from the experience and knowledge of the people it works with, not from the assumptions of those who come from outside. Ask: can you think of examples of healthcare or development programmes that failed because they were designed without adequate community engagement?
Global Studies When examining the political economy of global health
How to introduce
Apply Farmer's political economy analysis to a specific global health issue. Take drug pricing: why are life-saving medicines unaffordable in poor countries? Work through the political economy: patent protection, trade agreements, the interests of pharmaceutical companies, the failure of international health governance to ensure access. Ask: is this a technical problem or a political one? What would need to change for essential medicines to be accessible to everyone who needs them? Connect to Rodney's analysis of how economic structures benefit some countries at the expense of others.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Farmer's approach is idealistic and not practically replicable at scale.

What to teach instead

Partners in Health has operated at scale across multiple countries and has influenced global health policy in concrete ways: their work on drug-resistant tuberculosis changed WHO treatment guidelines; their work in Rwanda helped build one of the strongest healthcare systems in sub-Saharan Africa. Farmer explicitly rejected the argument that his approach was idealistic, arguing that the real idealism lay in the assumption that poor countries could improve health without adequate investment. The constraint on scaling his approach is political will and funding, not practical feasibility.

Common misconception

Farmer's concept of structural violence means individuals have no responsibility for their own health.

What to teach instead

Farmer's structural violence framework does not deny individual agency or responsibility. It argues that the conditions in which people live powerfully shape what choices are available to them and how easy those choices are to make. A person who cannot access clean water, who lacks adequate food, who works in dangerous conditions, and who cannot afford healthcare faces structural obstacles to health that are not of their making. Individual choices matter, but they operate within structural conditions that either support or undermine them. Addressing structural conditions makes individual healthy choices more possible, not less.

Common misconception

Farmer was a saint who had no personal ambitions or contradictions.

What to teach instead

Tracy Kidder's biography Mountains Beyond Mountains, written with Farmer's cooperation, presents him as a complex and sometimes difficult person: driven, demanding, hard on himself and occasionally on others, sometimes impatient with colleagues who did not share his level of commitment. He was not a saint: he was a human being with extraordinary commitment and ordinary human complexity. Presenting him as a saint is actually a way of avoiding the challenge of his work: if he was superhuman, then ordinary people are not obligated to take his example seriously. Farmer himself resisted this hagiographic framing.

Common misconception

Global health is primarily a technical medical problem that does not require political analysis.

What to teach instead

Farmer's life work was an argument against this view. The diseases that kill the most people in the poorest countries are not medically mysterious: we know how to prevent and treat tuberculosis, HIV, malaria, and the leading causes of childhood mortality. The obstacles to doing so are not primarily technical but political and economic: the allocation of global resources, the design of trade and intellectual property agreements, the terms of international debt, and the political will of wealthy countries to invest in global health. Technical medical knowledge is necessary but not sufficient: political change is also required.

Intellectual Connections
Develops
Rudolf Virchow
Farmer explicitly acknowledged Virchow as one of his intellectual heroes and developed Virchow's argument that medicine is a social science into a global justice framework. Where Virchow argued that poverty caused disease in nineteenth-century Germany and demanded political reform, Farmer argues that global structural inequality causes disease in the poorest countries and demands global political and economic reform. Both combine rigorous clinical practice with passionate political advocacy.
In Dialogue With
Amartya Sen
Sen's capabilities approach argues that health is a fundamental capability that a just society must provide for all. Farmer's structural violence framework argues that the global economic and political order systematically denies this capability to the world's poorest people. Together they provide a complete argument for global health justice: Sen provides the normative framework, showing why health equality is a matter of justice rather than charity; Farmer provides the empirical and historical analysis showing how the current distribution of health is produced and sustained.
Extends
Paulo Freire
Farmer was influenced by liberation theology, which drew heavily on Freire's pedagogy of the oppressed. The accompaniment principle in Farmer's work, which insists on working with communities rather than doing things to them, on starting from the experience and knowledge of the people being served, is directly Freirean. Both Freire and Farmer argue that genuine liberation, whether educational or medical, requires genuine partnership with those being served rather than expert-led intervention from above.
Complements
Walter Rodney
Rodney's historical analysis of how European colonialism impoverished Africa and Farmer's historical analysis of how Haiti was made poor are parallel applications of the same political economy framework. Both argue that the poverty of formerly colonised peoples is not a natural condition but the product of specific historical processes of extraction and exploitation. Both draw political conclusions: addressing this poverty requires more than technical aid; it requires changing the economic and political structures that continue to extract value from poor countries.
Complements
Florence Nightingale
Both Nightingale and Farmer combined rigorous clinical observation with political advocacy for systemic change, and both demonstrated through concrete results that preventable deaths could be prevented with sufficient commitment and organisation. Nightingale showed that improving hospital conditions could dramatically reduce mortality in the Crimea. Farmer showed that building functioning health systems could dramatically reduce mortality in Haiti and Rwanda. Both used evidence to argue that the apparent impossibility of change was a political choice rather than a practical constraint.
In Dialogue With
Wangari Maathai
Both Farmer and Maathai understood that the problems they were addressing, disease and environmental destruction respectively, could not be solved without addressing the political and economic structures that produced them, and both built practical organisations that demonstrated what was possible within these constraints. Both also emphasised the importance of working with and through local communities rather than imposing solutions from outside, and both connected their practical work to a broader vision of justice that went beyond their specific domains.
Further Reading

The Anthropology of Structural Violence, Farmer's key theoretical essay, is freely available in the journal Current Anthropology.

For Partners in Health's model

Reimagining Global Health, edited by Paul Farmer and others (2013, University of California Press), is the most systematic academic statement of their approach.

For critical engagement

Arachu Castro and Merrill Singer's edited collection Unhealthy Health Policy (2004, AltaMira Press) examines the political economy of global health from perspectives that complement and sometimes challenge Farmer's.