In this paper, I discuss the epistemological injustices that Black women face in academia. I review Patricia Hill Collins’s work, “Learning from the Outsider Within: Sociological Significance of Black Feminist Thought,” which details the unique knowledge standpoint that Black women possess. I build upon the ideas set forth by Collins and other scholars to understand how the traditional knowledge validation process is tainted with political implications and harms Black women. I then offer recommendations rooted in alternative epistemology principles to combat the injustices inherent in academia
Food-related discussions have grown exponentially within and outside of academia in the last few dec...
Using a doctoral examination question as a starting point, this paper explores the specific race-gen...
In 1986, sociologist Patricia Hill Collins published the groundbreaking essay, “Learning from the Ou...
In this paper, I discuss the epistemological injustices that Black women face in academia. I review ...
This paper will focus on the ways in which white feminist academics commit epistemic injustice in th...
Mainstream academia in the West reinscribes racial thinking by strategically reducing the theoretica...
This essay bridges the gaps in the literature within legislative studies by illustrating the usefuln...
Within the social sciences, and particularly in political science, feminist methods and theory are s...
As a teacher-scholar, this autoethnographic is an account of my personal journey in higher education...
This article introduces the concept of epistemic positioning to theorize the relationship between id...
Why do the majority of (white) academics within management and organization studies (MOS) endorse di...
This project is one of reclamation, an attempt to explore and name Black undergraduate women’s exper...
Current research in philosophy argues that there is an epistemic dimension to injustice and has focu...
This paper presents a critical overview of the sociological research on Black women\u27s experiences...
Black women have long occupied marginal positions in academic settings. I argue that many Black fema...
Food-related discussions have grown exponentially within and outside of academia in the last few dec...
Using a doctoral examination question as a starting point, this paper explores the specific race-gen...
In 1986, sociologist Patricia Hill Collins published the groundbreaking essay, “Learning from the Ou...
In this paper, I discuss the epistemological injustices that Black women face in academia. I review ...
This paper will focus on the ways in which white feminist academics commit epistemic injustice in th...
Mainstream academia in the West reinscribes racial thinking by strategically reducing the theoretica...
This essay bridges the gaps in the literature within legislative studies by illustrating the usefuln...
Within the social sciences, and particularly in political science, feminist methods and theory are s...
As a teacher-scholar, this autoethnographic is an account of my personal journey in higher education...
This article introduces the concept of epistemic positioning to theorize the relationship between id...
Why do the majority of (white) academics within management and organization studies (MOS) endorse di...
This project is one of reclamation, an attempt to explore and name Black undergraduate women’s exper...
Current research in philosophy argues that there is an epistemic dimension to injustice and has focu...
This paper presents a critical overview of the sociological research on Black women\u27s experiences...
Black women have long occupied marginal positions in academic settings. I argue that many Black fema...
Food-related discussions have grown exponentially within and outside of academia in the last few dec...
Using a doctoral examination question as a starting point, this paper explores the specific race-gen...
In 1986, sociologist Patricia Hill Collins published the groundbreaking essay, “Learning from the Ou...