This document contains the schedule for a two-day conference on epistemic injustice. Day 1 includes keynote speeches on topics such as epistemic agency under oppression. There are also several speaker sessions discussing concepts like injustice in conceptual spaces and the relationship between epistemic injustice and moral epistemology. Day 2 continues with more speaker sessions on related topics such as testimonial withdrawal, privilege and achieving epistemic justice, and taking epistemic oppression as a starting point. The schedule provides timing and speaker information for each session.
This document contains the schedule for a two-day conference on epistemic injustice. Day 1 includes keynote speeches on topics such as epistemic agency under oppression. There are also several speaker sessions discussing concepts like injustice in conceptual spaces and the relationship between epistemic injustice and moral epistemology. Day 2 continues with more speaker sessions on related topics such as testimonial withdrawal, privilege and achieving epistemic justice, and taking epistemic oppression as a starting point. The schedule provides timing and speaker information for each session.
This document contains the schedule for a two-day conference on epistemic injustice. Day 1 includes keynote speeches on topics such as epistemic agency under oppression. There are also several speaker sessions discussing concepts like injustice in conceptual spaces and the relationship between epistemic injustice and moral epistemology. Day 2 continues with more speaker sessions on related topics such as testimonial withdrawal, privilege and achieving epistemic justice, and taking epistemic oppression as a starting point. The schedule provides timing and speaker information for each session.
This document contains the schedule for a two-day conference on epistemic injustice. Day 1 includes keynote speeches on topics such as epistemic agency under oppression. There are also several speaker sessions discussing concepts like injustice in conceptual spaces and the relationship between epistemic injustice and moral epistemology. Day 2 continues with more speaker sessions on related topics such as testimonial withdrawal, privilege and achieving epistemic justice, and taking epistemic oppression as a starting point. The schedule provides timing and speaker information for each session.
9:00- 9:40 Knowledgeable, Responsible Agency Keynote: Gaile Pohlhaus (Miami) Under Epistemic Injustice 9:05- 10:30 Epistemic Agency Under Oppression Abraham Tobi (UJ) 9:50-10:30 10:30- Epistemic Injustice Without Moral Injustice Coffee 11:00 10:30- Coffee Fran Fairbairn (Cornell) 11:00 11:00- 11:40 Injustice in the Spaces Between Leonie Smith (Manchester) 11:00- Concepts 11:40 Epistemic Nudging: Reclaiming our agency Ademola Kazeem Fayemi (Lagos/ UJ) 11:50- Sean Muller (UJ) 12:30 Epistemic Injustice and Barry Hallen’s 11:50- Account of Yoruba Moral Epistemology 12:30 A Spectrum of Privilege: Implications for Achieving Epistemic Justice
12:30- George Hull (UCT)
12:30- Emily McWilliams (Duke Kunshan/ Harvard) 13:10 Epistemic Redress 13:10 Testimonial Withdraw 13:10- lunch 13:10- 14:00 lunch 14:00 14:00- Nolwandle Lembethe (Wits) Ward E. Jones (Rhodes) 14:40 Hate speech: where’s the harm? 14:00- 14:40 On Taking Epistemic Oppression as Our Starting Point Daniel Hammer (Goethe University 14:50- Frankfurt) 15:30 14:50- Amy Flowerree (Texas Tech University) The Deontology of Testimonial Injustice 15:30 What’s Wrong with Epistemic Injustice? 15:40- coffee 15:40- 16:00 coffee 16:00 Jess Lerm (UWC) 16:00- 16:00- Veli Mitova (UJ) 16:40 Cultural Appropriation and Epistemic 16:40 Explanatory Epistemic Injustice Injustice