Epistemic Injustices in Disaster Theory and Management

IF 0.6 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Alicia García Álvarez
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The present paper argues that the standardised treatment of disaster research and practice perpetuates the production of systematic epistemic injustices against victims of disasters. On the one hand, disaster victims are often prevented from contributing with their opinions and knowledge to the processes of disaster mitigation and disaster conceptualisation. On the other hand, disaster victims tend to lack the hermeneutical resources to make sense of their experiences intelligibly, due to the existence of significant hermeneutical gaps in the hegemonic terminology on the matter. I argue that both forms of epistemic injustice, the testimonial and the hermeneutical, are sustained by an epistemic privilege between the Global North and the Global South in matters of disasters. The second group comprises what I categorise generally as ‘disaster victims’. I identify two forms of structural prejudice that operate against disaster victims: one is the ‘non-expert’ prejudice, and the other is the colonial prejudice. Finally, because of the intercultural nature of disaster environments, I discuss the field of ‘multicultural competencies’ as a useful form of unveiling and counteracting the epistemic injustices contained in both disaster theory and practice.
灾害理论与管理中的认识论不公正问题
本文认为,对灾害研究和实践的标准化处理,使得对灾害受害者的系统性认识不公正现象长期存在。一方面,灾民往往无法在减灾和灾害概念化过程中贡献自己的意见和知识。另一方面,由于相关的霸权术语存在重大的诠释学缺陷,灾民往往缺乏诠释学资源来理解他们的经历。我认为,这两种形式的认识论不公正--见证论和诠释论--都因全球北方和全球南方在灾害问题上的认识论特权而得以维持。第二个群体包括我一般归类的 "灾难受害者"。我发现了两种针对灾民的结构性偏见:一种是 "非专家 "偏见,另一种是殖民偏见。最后,鉴于灾害环境的跨文化性质,我讨论了 "多元文化能力 "这一领域,认为它是揭示和抵消灾害理论与实践中所包含的认识论不公正的有效形式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Philosophies
Philosophies Multiple-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
11.10%
发文量
122
审稿时长
11 weeks
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