The Injustice Case Analysis Video
Injustice: Gods Among Us Critique - Ultimate Edition The Injustice Case AnalysisWe use OCD as a case study to argue that cumulatively these two effects generate a profound epistemic injustice to OCD sufferers, and possibly to those with other mental disorders. We Injistice that even seemingly positive stereotypes attached to mental disorders give rise to both testimonial injustice and wilful hermeneutical ignorance. We thus expose an insidious form of epistemic harm that has been overlooked in the literature.
References American Psychiatric Association. Barnes, Elizabeth. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
BBC News. Bonnington, Oliver and Diana Rose. Bueter, Anke. Chapman, Robert. London: Bloomsbury Academic.
Cochran, Susan D. Davis, Emmalon. Dawson, David Laing. Dundas, ON: Bridgeross Communications. Drescher, Jack.
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Drummond, Lynne M. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Fennell, Dana and Michael Boyd. Fricker, Miranda. Epistemic Injustice: Power and the Ethics of Knowing.
Photography In The Civil Rights Movement
Good Morning Britain. Graby, Steve. Bristol: Policy Press.
Greenberg, Gary. Victoria: Scribe. Halfmann, Drew. Huang, Yanshu, Paul G. Davies, Chris G. Sibley, and Danny Osborne. Kay, Aaron C. Day, Mark P. Zanna, and A. David Nussbaum.]
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