This article focuses on the injustices experienced by already marginalised groups when they are excluded from participation in society, specifically within the realms of knowledge production and transfer. In this sense they are wronged as ‘knowers’ and experience epistemic injustice, either as a consequence of perceived credibility deficits or due to a lack of understanding of their situation. As a result, their marginalisation and exclusion grows. This article argues that a values orientation of acceptance, awareness and virtue, combined with an analytical framework provided by critical realism, can better equip social work practitioners and policy makers in identifying and understanding sites of epistemic injustice
The concept of evil continues to feature in public discourses and has been reinvigorated in some aca...
The debate in the social work academy about the pertinence of empiricist/positivist modes of knowing...
The dominance of neoliberalism in the west such as Australia and the UK and its insistence on impact...
© The Author(s) 2017. My aim in this article is to propose that an insightful way of articulating th...
This article considers the place of knowledge in developing a socially just curriculum. It pursues t...
Social work is a practice-based profession that is underpinned by the principles of social justice a...
What makes an injustice epistemic rather than ethical or political? How does the former, more recent...
Summary: The authors argue that social work is as much a practical-moral activity as it is a technic...
Epistemic injustice has rapidly become a powerful tool for analysis of otherwise hidden social harm...
Epistemic injustice has rapidly become a powerful tool for analysis of otherwise hidden social harms...
Summary: The authors argue that social work is as much a practical-moral activity as it is a technic...
This short article explores the expanding and contested terrain of social work ethics, considering t...
“Epistemic injustice” refers to how people from marginalized groups are denied opportunities to crea...
This article considers the challenges faced by social workers struggling to act ethically in what we...
Social work has never been an easy task. Fraught with uncertainty, social workers are charged with m...
The concept of evil continues to feature in public discourses and has been reinvigorated in some aca...
The debate in the social work academy about the pertinence of empiricist/positivist modes of knowing...
The dominance of neoliberalism in the west such as Australia and the UK and its insistence on impact...
© The Author(s) 2017. My aim in this article is to propose that an insightful way of articulating th...
This article considers the place of knowledge in developing a socially just curriculum. It pursues t...
Social work is a practice-based profession that is underpinned by the principles of social justice a...
What makes an injustice epistemic rather than ethical or political? How does the former, more recent...
Summary: The authors argue that social work is as much a practical-moral activity as it is a technic...
Epistemic injustice has rapidly become a powerful tool for analysis of otherwise hidden social harm...
Epistemic injustice has rapidly become a powerful tool for analysis of otherwise hidden social harms...
Summary: The authors argue that social work is as much a practical-moral activity as it is a technic...
This short article explores the expanding and contested terrain of social work ethics, considering t...
“Epistemic injustice” refers to how people from marginalized groups are denied opportunities to crea...
This article considers the challenges faced by social workers struggling to act ethically in what we...
Social work has never been an easy task. Fraught with uncertainty, social workers are charged with m...
The concept of evil continues to feature in public discourses and has been reinvigorated in some aca...
The debate in the social work academy about the pertinence of empiricist/positivist modes of knowing...
The dominance of neoliberalism in the west such as Australia and the UK and its insistence on impact...