2023
DOI: 10.1017/s0047279423000363
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Recognising and addressing wealth privilege in policymaking through an analysis of epistemic practice and agency

Abstract: The author makes the case that wealth inequality ramifies in the communicative practices of policymaking in ways which produce specific forms of epistemic injustice. Relative epistemic authority between richer and poorer knowers is established by limiting some speakers to being sources of information, and elevating others to the epistemically more sophisticated role of inquirer. In its systemic form, this differentiation has the effect of re-producing and maintaining ‘tracker prejudices’ (Fricker, 2007) and ‘t… Show more

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