Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Outputs (4)

Epistemic injustice and epistemic positioning: towards an intersectional political economy (2021)
Journal Article
Bacevic, J. (2023). Epistemic injustice and epistemic positioning: towards an intersectional political economy. Current Sociology, 71(6), 1122-1140. https://doi.org/10.1177/00113921211057609

This article introduces the concept of epistemic positioning to theorize the relationship between identity-based epistemic judgements and the reproduction of social inequalities, including those of gender and ethnicity/race, in the academia. Acts of... Read More about Epistemic injustice and epistemic positioning: towards an intersectional political economy.

Why do we fail to predict social crises? (2021)
Book Chapter
Bacevic, J. (2022). Why do we fail to predict social crises?. In S. Jasanoff (Ed.), Un/certainty. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press

No such thing as sociological excuses? Performativity, rationality and social scientific expertise in late liberalism (2021)
Journal Article
Bacevic, J. (2021). No such thing as sociological excuses? Performativity, rationality and social scientific expertise in late liberalism. European Journal of Social Theory, 24(3), 394-410. https://doi.org/10.1177/13684310211018939

This article examines a frequent assumption of sociological accounts of knowledge: the idea that knowledge acts. The performativity of knowledge claims is here analysed through the prism of ‘sociological excuses’: the idea that sociological explanati... Read More about No such thing as sociological excuses? Performativity, rationality and social scientific expertise in late liberalism.