Skip to content
#

epistemic-injustice

Here are 4 public repositories matching this topic...

Open letter to David Chalmers and David Bourget addresses serious fiduciary governance failures, conflicts of interest, and lack of transparency at PhilPapers, calling urgently for accountability and reform to protect epistemic justice in academia.

  • Updated Jul 6, 2025

A multimodal poetic thesis explicitly critiquing academic gatekeeping and epistemic domestication. Through poetry, multilingualism, and visual epistemology, it illustrates how traditional academic structures actively constrain knowledge into sanctioned forms.

  • Updated Jun 29, 2025

Peter Kahl argues that epistemic violence in universities, journals, and academic platforms constitutes fiduciary breaches harming democratic discourse. He proposes radical fiduciary reforms for inclusive, pluralistic scholarship.

  • Updated Jul 10, 2025

In this paper, I critically examine institutional epistemic gatekeepers—including academic platforms such as PhilPapers, JSTOR, major publishers, and academic repositories—as fiduciaries entrusted with safeguarding epistemic diversity, justice, and integrity.

  • Updated Jul 7, 2025

Improve this page

Add a description, image, and links to the epistemic-injustice topic page so that developers can more easily learn about it.

Curate this topic

Add this topic to your repo

To associate your repository with the epistemic-injustice topic, visit your repo's landing page and select "manage topics."

Learn more