Healing As Justice

A hand against blue shards points to the words shattered justice

Healing As Justice

This paper integrates insights from clinical narrative essays with frameworks from liberation medicine, critical medical anthropology, and restorative justice theory to propose a unified model of healing as justice. Drawing upon Paul Farmer's concept of accompaniment, Nancy Scheper-Hughes's embodied witnessing, and legal theories of dignity and repair, this study positions the physician as moral witness, narrative interpreter, and advocate for healing justice. Enhanced with insights from shame-based healing paradigms, Catholic social thought, and ontological theories of suffering and healing, this framework bridges personal therapeutic presence with structural analysis, offering a vision of medicine that recognizes the therapeutic encounter as a site where dignity is restored, suffering is witnessed, and justice is enacted through sacred attentiveness.

Previous
Previous

The Divine Paradox in Clinical Practice

Next
Next

The Patient as Parable