Epistemic injustice as a bridge between medical sociology and disability studies

Activity: Talk or presentation typesInvited talk

Description

This paper explores the potential of the perspective of epistemic injustice to reconcile medical sociology’s attention to the micro level of experience and interpersonal exchange, and disability studies’ focus on the macro level of oppressive structures. The first part of the paper provides an overview of the concept of epistemic injustice and its key instances – testimonial, hermeneutical, and contributory injustice. We also consider previous applications of the concept in the fields of healthcare and disability, and we contextualise our investigation by discussing key features of postsocialism from the perspective of epistemic injustice. In the second part, we explore specific epistemic injustices experienced by people who use disability support by drawing on interviews and focus groups conducted with parents of disabled children in present-day Bulgaria. In our conclusion, we revisit our methodological and theoretical points about the potential of epistemic injustice to facilitate mutually beneficial exchanges between medical sociology and disability studies.
Period3 Sept 2024
Event titleLeeds Disability Studies Conference (2024)
Event typeConference
LocationLeeds, United KingdomShow on map
Degree of RecognitionInternational

Keywords

  • epistemic injustice
  • disability
  • human rights
  • professional power
  • parental activism