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Miranda Fricker's Epistemic Injustice (2007) Revisited: Coloniality, Intersectionality, Decoloniality
Mandeep Sidhu
School of Humanities and Social Science
Centre for Applied Philosophy, Politics and Ethics
Doctoral College
Centre for Design History
Research output
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Thesis
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Master's Thesis
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Dive into the research topics of 'Miranda Fricker's Epistemic Injustice (2007) Revisited: Coloniality, Intersectionality, Decoloniality'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Keyphrases
Acute Form
20%
Central Case
20%
Coloniality
100%
Decoloniality
100%
Disability
20%
Epistemic Injustice
100%
Everyday Experiences
20%
Fricker
20%
Historical Oppression
20%
Intersectional
20%
Justice
20%
Material Conditions
20%
Material Inequality
20%
Materials Knowledge
20%
Miranda
20%
Miranda Fricker
100%
Modernity
20%
Non-ideal Theory
20%
Non-ideality
40%
Oppressed Group
60%
Real-world Experience
20%
Sexuality
20%
Socio-historical
20%
Arts and Humanities
Coloniality
100%
Epistemic injustice
100%
Injustice
40%
Intersectionality
100%
Miranda Fricker
100%
Neutral
20%
Non-ideal Theory
20%
Social Sciences
Decoloniality
100%
Everyday Experience
100%
Intersectionality
100%
Justice
100%