DOI: 10.1177/17416590261461898 ISSN: 1741-6590

Faceless harms

Mark Wood

Not all social harms announce themselves. This research note introduces the concept of faceless harms: injuries to an individual’s lifetime wellbeing that victims never consciously experience. These harms foreclose opportunities, shape trajectories, and quietly lower the ceiling of what a life might have been. Because they are not recognised, they often evade help-seeking and collective mobilisation, folding into business as usual. Drawing on examples including reputational damage from doxxing, and allocative harms produced by algorithmic social sorting, I argue that faceless harms expose an experiential bias within social harm and criminological scholarship and reveal a form of injury that can be particularly resistant to recognition and redress.

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