Results 151 to 160 of about 1,265 (250)

Hermeneutical Injustice and Special Education

open access: yes
Hermeneutics is a branch of philosophy that is concerned with interpretation. Importantly, it is concerned with the interpretation, understanding, and communication of our own experiences. Our identities, how they are constructed and performed, are based
Reid, Nicole
core  

Hermeneutical injustice and the computational turn in law

open access: yes, 2021
In this paper, I argue that the computational turn in law poses a potential challenge to the legal protections that the rule of law has traditionally afforded us, of a distinctively hermeneutical kind. Computational law brings increased epistemic opacity to the legal system, thereby constraining our ability to understand the law (and ourselves in light
openaire   +1 more source

Epistemic injustice, ignorance, and trans experiences

open access: yes, 2017
Hermeneutical injustice is the injustice of being frustrated in an attempt to render a significant social experience intelligible where hermeneutical marginalization is a significant causal factor in that failure.
Fricker, Miranda, Jenkins, Katharine
core  

Epistemic injustice and conditioned experience : the case of intellectual disability

open access: yes, 2016
People with intellectual disabilities are commonly seen as "nonadult others" and as persons of limited credibility, and this view has implications in a number of areas.
Sauer, Lennart,   +2 more
core  

Locutionary Disablement and Epistemic Injustice

open access: yes, 2016
In this paper, I investigate how the notion of epistemic injustice relates to two distinct, though not incompatible, models of the phenomenon of silencing: epistemic and linguistic.
Grabelsky, Dana Elizabeth
core  

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