
An IASH Work-in-Progress seminar, delivered by Professor Jonathan Havercroft (IASH-SSPS Research Fellow, 2023-24; University of Southampton)
Responding to Riots: Epistemic Injustice and Recent Anti-Police Uprisings
In response to major episodes of anti-police violence riots in the U.S. and the U.K., political theorists have paid increasing attention to the normative implications of political rioting. Most of this literature has either claimed that some rights might correct democratic imbalances or that riots might be justified in cases of extreme social injustice. This analysis of rioting tends to focus on the motivations to riot and the consequences of rioting. Missing in this analysis is a rigorous analysis of the public’s responsibility towards rioting. To address this gap, this article argues for a shift in perspective from questions around the justice of rioting to questions about the epistemic injustices that enable rioting to occur. By making this shift in focus, we can see that the culpability for some riots can fall upon a public that engages in three kinds of epistemic injustice: testimonial injustice, hermeneutic injustice, and motivated ignorance. Drawing upon recent insights on epistemic injustice from feminist philosophy and the philosophy of race, this article analyses two recent anti-police violence riots in London 2011 and Minneapolis in 2020. While the causes of the riots and the actions of the rioters were similar, the two events had dramatically different responses by the public. Through an analysis of government documents, speeches, and first-hand accounts of these two events the article demonstrates how epistemic injustices both enable rioting and shape the public response to riots.
Please join in-person, or click the link below to join the webinar:
https://ed-ac-uk.zoom.us/j/83178441780
Passcode: Kj7gnpP4
Please note that our weekly seminars will take place in the Moot Court in the School of Law between September and December 2023.
Accessibility: https://www.accessable.co.uk/venues/old-college-north