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[Commlist] cfp: epistemic injustice and higher education in the digital age
Sat Jun 04 08:37:26 GMT 2022
Reminder of the Call for papers — Journal of Digital Social Research -
https://www.jdsr.io/call-for-papers <https://www.jdsr.io/call-for-papers>
EPISTEMIC INJUSTICE AND HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE DIGITAL AGE
Guest editors- Matteo Stocchetti and Tiina Räisä
Background to this special issue
The notion of epistemic injustice is described in the seminal study by
Miranda Fricker, Epistemic Injustice, Power and the Ethics of Knowing,
and the contributions that followed (Anderson, 2012; Kidd, José Medina,
& Pohlhaus, 2017; Medina, 2011; 2012; Pohlhaus, 2012). With this call
for a special issue of the Journal of Digital Social Research we want to
contribute to the development of this approach, extending the heuristic
potential of ‘epistemic injustice’ to the epistemic effects of
digitalization and to support democratic education by providing
professional educators with an intellectual tool to equip future
generations with the competences and moral inclination, to address the
epistemic roots of the current ‘crisis’ of democracy (D’Olimpio, 2021).
There is great potential to this exploration as it suggests, for
example, that the contemporary concerns with epistemic trust in
political communication (Dahlgren 2016) pay insufficient attention to
issues of social power and to the idea that ‘social disadvantage can
produce unjust epistemic disadvantage’ (Fricker, 2007, p. 2).
At least three arguments in the current debate, point to the key role of
higher education in the fight against epistemic injustice. First, the
importance of ‘epistemologies of ignorance’ (Mills, 2007), or the social
ignorance about the limits of our knowledge that has roots in ‘social
silences’ (Medina, 2012) and ‘willful hermeneutic ignorance’ (Pohlhaus,
2012), and that plays a fundamental role in preserving epistemic
injustice despite e.g. technological progress.
Second, the notion of institutional responsibility in the protection of
epistemic justice (Anderson, 2012), or the idea that democratic social
institutions must promote justice also on epistemic level.
Third, the notion of ‘epistemologies of resistance’ (Medina, 2013) which
engage with the epistemic level of the social practices fighting
injustice. To look further into the epistemic dimension of social
injustice is thus important for deeper understanding of the current
‘crisis of democracy’ and the possibility of more effective educational
and pedagogical interventions. Considering the extent to which the
Internet is an integral part of (especially young) people's daily life,
and the growing impact of artificial intelligence and machine learning
in social governance, the impact of new technologies on epistemic
injustice cannot be ignored. Previous research by the special issue
editors has focused on the nature of epistemic beliefs (Ståhl, 2019) and
epistemic authority (Ståhl et al., 2021) among higher education
students, indicating that a higher level of internet reliance goes hand
in hand with a view of knowledge as certain, as simply structured and as
being handed down by authority. Most worryingly, the latter study
suggests that ‘algorithmic authority’ seems to be a neglected concept.
*WHAT WE SEEK*
The main goal of this special issue is to develop the insights of the
innovative analysis of Miranda Fricker & colleagues in support of
democratic education and the responsibility of higher education in
dealing with the epistemic injustice associated with the processes of
digitalization in formal education. With this special issue we also seek
to ‘map’ the approaches to epistemic injustice in the digital age. In
doing so, however, we are aware of the fundamental problem of
representation. While a map is a representation of a space that exists
independently from the map itself, in the task we are setting to
ourselves, problems and tools exists only and only if they are
represented. It is the distinctive quality of epistemic injustice –
every form of injustice depending on ways of knowing – to exist as
injustice only if and when their existence is revealed by epistemic
mutations: more or less fundamental changes in the way we experience the
world.
*The special issue of the Journal of Digital Social Research welcomes
contributions in form of a) summaries of the state of the art, b)
preliminary efforts to combine epistemic injustice (EI) with
digitalization, learning and higher education (HE), c) directions for
further research aiming about combining EI, digitalization and HE in
support of epistemic competences and democracy.*
We also welcome contributions dealing with, but not limited to, the
following themes:
+ The case for applying the EI approach to digitalization and higher
education.
+ The classical approach to EI: contributions to a ‘history’ of the
approach itself that could facilitate the identifications of ‘bridges’
towards digitalization and higher education.
+ What are the main features (e.g. concepts and problems) of the
classical and the more recent approaches to the study of epistemic
injustice.
+ Available ‘explorations’ of EI in the field of digitalization and
higher education.
+ Empirical exercises: instances in which the EI approach has inspired
empirical studies.
+ Methodological problems associated with the study of EI and the
application of this approach to digitalization and higher education.
+ Exploration of the linkage between EI, learning, critical pedagogy,
Bildung, etc
+ Representation of EI in social media and professional online networks
+ EI and AI: the question of applying EI to AI and related technology
from the standpoint of higher education: reviews of available study, etc.
+ EI and ‘surveillance capitalism’ a notion discussed in depth by
Shoshana Zuboff in her work. The linkage between these two notions and
the debates around them deserve more attention for its critical potential.
WHAT AND HOW TO SUBMIT
We invite researchers to submit an English-language abstract of no more
than 500 words (without references). The author(s) should email their
abstract proposal as a Word file to both (matteo.stocchetti /at/ arcada.fi)
and meda*_*(epistemic /at/ ad.arcada.fi)
Process and timeline
May 2, 2022: Abstract submission opens.
June 30, 2022: Abstract submission deadline.
Mid-August : Notification of the decision to submit the full manuscript
to JDSR.
Please note that the initial acceptance of an abstract does not
guarantee acceptance of the full manuscript. No payment from the authors
will be required
January 15, 2023: Full manuscript submission deadline.
January – April, 2023: Review process (1-2 rounds).
April, 2023: Decision on manuscripts.
For more information on the Journal of Digital Social Research, please
visit the journal’s website: https://www.jdsr.io/ <https://www.jdsr.io/>
and the webpage with this call:
https://www.jdsr.io/call-for-papers<https://www.jdsr.io/call-for-papers>
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