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- Cognitive_justice abstract "The concept of cognitive justice is based on the recognition of the plurality of knowledge and expresses the right of the different forms of knowledge to co-exist.Indian scholar Shiv Visvanathan coined the term cognitive justice in his 1997 book “A Carnival for Science: Essays on science, technology and development”. Commenting on the destructive impact of hegemonic Western science on developing countries and non-Western cultures, Visvanathan calls for the recognition of alternative sciences or non-Western forms of knowledge. He argues that different knowledges are connected with different livelihoods and lifestyles and should therefore be treated equally.Cognitive justice is a critique on the dominant paradigm of modern science and promotes the recognition of alternative paradigms or alternative sciences by facilitating and enabling dialogue between, often incommensurable, knowledges. These dialogues of knowledge are perceived as contributing to a more sustainable, equitable, and democratic world. The call for cognitive justice is found in a growing variety of fields, such as ethnobiology, technology and database design, and in Information and communication technology for development (ICT4D).South-African scholar and UNESCO education expert Odora Hoppers proposes cognitive justice in the field of education. She argues that Indigenous knowledges have to be included in the dialogues of knowledge without having to fit in the structures and standards of Western knowledge. When Indigenous knowledges are treated equally, they can play their role in making a more democratic and dialogical science, which remains connected to the livelihoods and survival of all cultures.".
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- Cognitive_justice wikiPageRevisionID "686721276".
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLink Category:Knowledge.
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLink Commensurability_(ethics).
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLink Database_design.
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLink Developing_country.
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLink Ethnobiology.
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLink Hegemony.
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLink Information_and_communication_technology_for_development_(ICT4D).
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLink Knowledge.
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLink Shiv_Visvanathan.
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cognitive justice".
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageWikiLinkText "cognitive justice".
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Orphan.
- Cognitive_justice wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Cognitive_justice subject Category:Knowledge.
- Cognitive_justice type Concept.
- Cognitive_justice comment "The concept of cognitive justice is based on the recognition of the plurality of knowledge and expresses the right of the different forms of knowledge to co-exist.Indian scholar Shiv Visvanathan coined the term cognitive justice in his 1997 book “A Carnival for Science: Essays on science, technology and development”.".
- Cognitive_justice label "Cognitive justice".
- Cognitive_justice sameAs Q5141216.
- Cognitive_justice sameAs m.0g5qdv6.
- Cognitive_justice sameAs Q5141216.
- Cognitive_justice wasDerivedFrom Cognitive_justice?oldid=686721276.
- Cognitive_justice isPrimaryTopicOf Cognitive_justice.