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Diversity Reading List

Helping you include authors from under-represented groups in your teaching

It’s Time for a Black Bioethics

Posted on January 23, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

There are some long-standing social issues that imperil Black Americans’ relationship with health and healthcare. These issues include racial disparities in health outcomes (Barr 2014), provider bias and racism lessening their access to quality care (Sabin et al. 2009), disproportionate police killings (DeGue, Fowler, and Calkins 2016), and white supremacy and racism which encourage poor health (Williams and Mohammed 2013). Bioethics, comprised of humanities, legal, science, and medical scholars committed to ethical reasoning is prima facie well suited to address these problems and influence solutions in the form of policy and education. Bioethics, however, so far has shown only a minimal commitment to Black racial justice.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Forms of Government, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public Policy, Mental States and Processes, RaceTagged black bioethics, healthcare, maternal moratlity, racismLeave a comment

Ethics of Caring in Environmental Ethics: Indigenous and Feminist Philosophies

Posted on January 22, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Indigenous ethics and feminist care ethics offer a range of related ideas and tools for environmental ethics. These ethics delve into deep connections and moral commitments between nonhumans and humans to guide ethical forms of environmental decision making and environmental science. Indigenous and feminist movements such as the Mother Earth Water Walk and the Green Belt Movement are ongoing examples of the effectiveness of on-the-ground environmental care ethics. Indigenous ethics highlight attentive caring for the intertwined needs of humans and nonhumans within interdependent communities. Feminist environmental care ethics emphasize the importance of empowering communities to care for themselves and the social and ecological communities in which their lives and interests are interwoven. The gendered, feminist, historical, and anticolonial dimensions of care ethics, indigenous ethics, and other related approaches provide rich ground for rethinking and reclaiming the nature and depth of diverse relationships as the fabric of social and ecological being.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, SustainabilityTagged colonization, environmental awareness, environmental justice, future generations, indigenous knowledge, industrialization, interdependence, responsibility, subsistenceLeave a comment

Making Love and Relations Beyond Settler Sexuality

Posted on January 22, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Lecture as part of the Social Justice Institute Noted Scholars Lecture Series, co-presented by the Ecologies of Social Difference Research Network at the University of British Columbia.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Gender, Sex, and SexualityTagged anti-colonialism, ethical non-monogamy, kinship, natal justice, politics of monogamy, population ethics, sustainabilityLeave a comment

What’s Normative Got to Do with It?: Toward Indigenous Queer Relationality

Posted on January 22, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This article considers the queer problem of Indigenous studies that exists in the disjunctures and disconnections that emerge when queer studies, Indigenous studies, and Indigenous feminisms are brought into conversation. Reflecting on what the material and grounded body of indigeneity could mean in the context of settler colonialism, where Indigenous women and queers are disappeared into nowhere, and in light of Indigenous insistence on land as normative, where Indigenous bodies reemerge as first and foremost political orders, this article offers queer Indigenous relationality as an additive to Indigenous feminisms. What if, this article asks, queer indigeneity were centered as an analytic method that refuses normativity even as it imagines, through relationality, a possibility for the materiality of decolonization?

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Personal and Social IdentityTagged grounded normativity, grounded relationality, indigeneity, Indigenous feminisms, queer Indigenous studiesLeave a comment

I Am Woman: A Native Perspective on Sociology and Feminism

Posted on January 22, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

I Am Woman represents my personal struggle with womanhood, culture, traditional spiritual beliefs and political sovereignty, written during a time when that struggle was not over. My original intention was to empower Native women to take to heart their own personal struggle for Native feminist being. The changes made in this second edition of the text do not alter my original intention. It remains my attempt to present a Native woman’s sociological perspective on the impacts of colonialism on us, as women, and on my self personally.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Forms of Government, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public Policy, Mental States and Processes, RaceTagged colonialism, de-colonizing feminity, healing, liberation, sexual desire, struggle, womanhoodLeave a comment

Two Spirit People

Posted on January 22, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

An overview of historical and contemporary Native American concepts of gender, sexuality and sexual orientation. This documentary explores the berdache tradition in Native American culture, in which individuals who embody feminine and masculine qualities act as a conduit between the physical and spiritual world, and because of this are placed in positions of power within the community.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Forms of Government, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public Policy, Mental States and Processes, RaceTagged acceptance, belonging, gender, sexual orientation, transcendence, translationLeave a comment

An Intersectional Feminist Theory of Moral Responsibility

Posted on November 30, 2021December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This book develops an intersectional feminist approach to moral responsibility. It accomplisheses four main goals. First, it outlines a concise list of the main principles of intersectional feminism. Second, it uses these principles to critique prevailing philosophical theories of moral responsibility. Third, it offers an account of moral responsibility that is compatible with the ethos of intersectional feminism. And fourth, it uses intersectional feminist principles to critique culturally normative responsibility practices.

This is the first book to provide an explicitly intersectional feminist approach to moral responsibility. After identifying the five principles central to intersectional feminism, the author demonstrates how influential theories of responsibility are incompatible with these principles. She argues that a normatively adequate theory of blame should not be preoccupied with the agency or traits of wrongdoers; it should instead underscore, and seek to ameliorate, oppression and adversity as experienced by the marginalized. Apt blame and praise, according to her intersectional feminist account, is both communicative and functionalist. The book concludes with an extensive discussion of culturally embedded responsibility practices, including asymmetrically structured conversations and gender- and racially biased social spaces.

An Intersectional Feminist Approach to Moral Responsibility presents a sophisticated and original philosophical account of moral responsibility. It will be of interest to philosophers working at the crossroads of moral responsibility, feminist philosophy, critical race theory, queer theory, critical disability studies, and intersectionality theory.

Posted in Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, MetaethicsTagged blame, injustice, moral responsibility, oppression, praiseLeave a comment

Banal Skepticism and the Errors of Doubt: On Ephecticism about Rape Accusations

Posted on November 30, 2021December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Ephecticism is the tendency towards suspension of belief. Epistemology often focuses on the error of believing when one ought to doubt. The converse error—doubting when one ought to believe—is relatively underexplored. This essay examines the errors of undue doubt.

I draw on the relevant alternatives framework to diagnose and remedy undue doubts about rape accusations. Doubters tend to invoke standards for belief that are too demanding, for example, and underestimate how farfetched uneliminated error possibilities are. They mistake seeing how incriminating evidence is compatible with innocence for a reason to withhold judgement.

Rape accusations help illuminate the causes and normativity of doubt. I propose a novel kind of epistemic injustice, for example, wherein patterns of unwarranted attention to farfetched error possibilities can cause those error possibilities to become relevant. Widespread unreasonable doubt thus renders doubt reasonable and makes it harder to know rape accusations. Finally, I emphasise that doubt is often a conservative force and I argue that the relevant alternatives framework helps defend against pernicious doubt-mongers.

Posted in Applied Epistemology, Metaethics, Normative EthicsTagged doubt, rape accusations, relevant alternatives theory, skepticismLeave a comment

Decolonizing Universalism: A Transnational Feminist Ethic

Posted on November 4, 2021December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Decolonizing Universalism develops a genuinely anti-imperialist feminism. Against relativism/universalism debates that ask feminists to either reject normativity or reduce feminism to a Western conceit, Khader’s nonideal universalism rediscovers the normative core of feminism in opposition to sexist oppression and reimagines the role of moral ideals in transnational feminist praxis.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Forms of Government, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public Policy, Mental States and Processes, RaceTagged Enlightenment values, ethnocentrism, feminism, sexist oppression, UniversalismLeave a comment

The Re-Enchantment of Humanism: An Interview with Sylvia Wynter

Posted on November 4, 2021December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Sylvia Wynter is a radical Jamaican theorist influenced, among others, by Frantz Fanon. This well known interview is often considered to be the best introduction to her thinking about the question of human in the aftermath of 1492 and the consequent racialisation of humanity.
Wynter rethinks dominant concepts of being human, arguing that they are based on a colonial and racialized model that divides the world into asymmetric categories such as “the selected and the dysselected”, center and periphery, or colonizers and colonized. Against this Wynter proposes a new humanism. According to Katherine McKittrick Wynter develops a “counterhumanism”, that breaks from the classification of humans in static, asymmetric categories.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Equality, Freedom and Rights, Justice, RaceTagged anti-colonialism, colonialism and postcolonialism, critical historiography, Humanism, legacies of colonialismLeave a comment

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