Estudios de Filosofía (Jul 2022)

Violence and epistemic injustice against indigenous communities in Colombia: epistemic agency, participation and territory

  • Juan David Franco Daza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.ef.347697
Journal volume & issue
no. 66
pp. 193 – 222

Abstract

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Epistemic violence and epistemic injustice occur when a person or collective suffers unjust harm as epistemic subjects. This article explores the role of these issues in the conflict known as “laws of dispossession”, which consists of the systematic issu- ance of regulations that legalize extractivist and capitalist procedures in the indigenous ancestral territories. Specifically, this article argues that this phenomenon generates specifically epistemic harm to Colombian indigenous communities since it prevents them from inhabiting their territories in a way that is coherent with their epistemic resources; also, that this damage stems from a significant inability of the neoliberal governments of the last two decades to recognize the particularities and importance of the concept of territory in the epistemological systems of the indigenous communities which imprints a dimension of epistemic marginalization to the phenomenon of political marginalization that these communities have denounced.

Keywords