Results 281 to 290 of about 88,491 (313)
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Criminal Testimonial Injustice
2023Abstract Through a detailed analysis that draws on work across philosophy, the law, and social psychology, this book shows that, from the very beginning of the American criminal legal process in interrogation rooms to its final stages in front of parole boards, testimony is extracted from individuals through processes that are coercive ...
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Further remarks on testimonial injustice in medical machine learning: a response to commentaries
Journal of Medical Ethics, 2023INTRODUCTION In my paper entitled ‘Testimonial injustice in medical machine learning’, I argued that machine learning (ML)based Prediction Drug Monitoring Programmes (PDMPs) could infringe on patients’ epistemic and moral standing inflicting a ...
G. Pozzi
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Disability & Society
Rape/sexual assault cases have high levels of attrition, with reports of sexual violence from people with learning disabilities/autism disproportionately represented. This paper presents the results of a small qualitative study in the UK which focuses on
Helen Williams, Alison Jobe
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Rape/sexual assault cases have high levels of attrition, with reports of sexual violence from people with learning disabilities/autism disproportionately represented. This paper presents the results of a small qualitative study in the UK which focuses on
Helen Williams, Alison Jobe
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Comments on “Testimonial Withdrawals and the Ontology of Testimonial Injustice”
Southwest Philosophy ReviewJosué M. Piñeiro
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Nonhuman Animals and Testimonial Injustice
The Journal of EthicsAnton Skretta
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2007
Abstract This chapter formulates a working definition of social power, and identifies and defines a sub-type — identity power. The first kind of epistemic injustice is explored: testimonial injustice, wherein a speaker receives an unfair deficit of credibility from a hearer owing to prejudice on the hearer's part.
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Abstract This chapter formulates a working definition of social power, and identifies and defines a sub-type — identity power. The first kind of epistemic injustice is explored: testimonial injustice, wherein a speaker receives an unfair deficit of credibility from a hearer owing to prejudice on the hearer's part.
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Children, credibility, and testimonial injustice
Journal of Social Philosophy, 2021According to Miranda Fricker (2007), a person suffers testimonial injustice when they suffer a wrongful credibility deficit—that is, when their assertions are met with undue skepticism. As yet, there is no discussion of testimonial injustice against the elderly. There is, however, an emerging discussion of testimonial injustice against children. That
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Testimonial Injustice and Teacher Education
Action in Teacher Education, 2020This narrative inquiry explores the experiences of LGBTQ+ teacher candidates of color in a teacher education program. Composed of vignettes written by teacher candidates and narrative analysis to frame the significance of and contexts within which the vignettes were written, this study first offers insight into the ways teacher candidates understand ...
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Guilty as charged?: Testimonial injustice or epistemic trespassers?
AccessWhat is lost when the research-informed testimony of philosophers of education is side-lined and their work interpretatively silenced, dismissed, undervalued or excluded?
Gerry Dunne
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THE DISMISSAL AND DEVALUATION OF DALIT EXPERIENCES: A FORM OF ‘TESTIMONIAL INJUSTICE’
The Social Science Review A Multidisciplinary JournalTestimonial injustice, a facet of epistemic injustice, obstructs individuals from engaging in knowledge-sharing. It manifests through disregarding or downplaying a person's testimony, often rooted in biases linked to social identities like race or caste.
Utpal Rakshit
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