Trabajo presentado en el Symposium “Research, teaching and learning across disciplinary frontiers”of the Department of Educational Research at Lancaster University, celebrado en Lancaster (Gran Bretaña), el 3 de julio de 2019This keynote explores the critical issue of knowledge production in universities in two ways: firstly, focusing on how research and teaching could expand capabilities of people not traditionally endorsed as producers of scientific discourse and truth. Secondly, discussing how different kind of epistemic injustice could limit and even block the epistemic capabilities of those actors. For this, we will follow, mainly, the contributions of scholars in the epistemic injustice debate as Miranda Fricker and José Medina. The e...
International audienceIn her insightful and worldly acclaimed work on epistemic injustice, Miranda F...
This paper interrogates the relationship between social science research and the ways of doing, know...
This paper brings a critical awareness to the interrelations between epistemic injustice and knowled...
This paper explores how University as social entity has great potential to confront epistemic injust...
This paper explores how University as social entity has great potential to confront epistemic injust...
The notion of epistemic justice helps interrogate existing practices of knowledge production, interp...
Higher education has been strongly contested in recent times, on the grounds of its role in reproduc...
In this article I make the case that epistemic othering constitutes epistemic injustice, which is in...
Higher education has been strongly contested in recent times, on the grounds of its role in reprodu...
Is epistemic injustice a form of distributive injustice? In her early, profoundly influential work o...
Universities tend to take an exclusive view of knowledge and who can generate such knowledge. This k...
This essay, which reflects on the “unfinished humanistic project†of decolonisation in Africa, is...
“Epistemic injustice” is a fairly new concept in philosophy, which, loosely speaking, describes a ki...
What does the concept of epistemic injustice do for us? What should we want it to do? If meaning is ...
The paper explores the possibilities for promoting epistemic justice in a South African university s...
International audienceIn her insightful and worldly acclaimed work on epistemic injustice, Miranda F...
This paper interrogates the relationship between social science research and the ways of doing, know...
This paper brings a critical awareness to the interrelations between epistemic injustice and knowled...
This paper explores how University as social entity has great potential to confront epistemic injust...
This paper explores how University as social entity has great potential to confront epistemic injust...
The notion of epistemic justice helps interrogate existing practices of knowledge production, interp...
Higher education has been strongly contested in recent times, on the grounds of its role in reproduc...
In this article I make the case that epistemic othering constitutes epistemic injustice, which is in...
Higher education has been strongly contested in recent times, on the grounds of its role in reprodu...
Is epistemic injustice a form of distributive injustice? In her early, profoundly influential work o...
Universities tend to take an exclusive view of knowledge and who can generate such knowledge. This k...
This essay, which reflects on the “unfinished humanistic project†of decolonisation in Africa, is...
“Epistemic injustice” is a fairly new concept in philosophy, which, loosely speaking, describes a ki...
What does the concept of epistemic injustice do for us? What should we want it to do? If meaning is ...
The paper explores the possibilities for promoting epistemic justice in a South African university s...
International audienceIn her insightful and worldly acclaimed work on epistemic injustice, Miranda F...
This paper interrogates the relationship between social science research and the ways of doing, know...
This paper brings a critical awareness to the interrelations between epistemic injustice and knowled...