Articles | Volume 75, issue 4
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-75-381-2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-75-381-2020
Standard article
 | 
12 Nov 2020
Standard article |  | 12 Nov 2020

Epistemic injustice, risk mapping and climatic events: analysing epistemic resistance in the context of favela removal in Rio de Janeiro

Luciana Mendes Barbosa and Gordon Walker

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Cited articles

Allen, A.: Power/Knowledge/Resistance: Foucault and Epistemic Injustice, in: The Routledge Handbook of Epistemic Injustice, edited by: Kidd, I. J., Medina, J., and Pohlhaus, G., Routledge, Abingdon, 187–194, 2017 
Allen, B. L.: Strongly Participatory Science and Knowledge Justice in an Environmentally Contested Region, Sci. Technol. Hum. Val., 43, 947–971, 2018. 
Allo, A. K.: The Courtroom as a Site of Epistemic Resistance: Mandela at Rivonia, Law Cul. Human., 16, 127–150, 2020. 
Barandiaran, J.: Chile's environmental assessments: contested knowledge in an emerging democracy, Sci. Cult., 24, 251–275, 2015. 
Barnett, J. and Campbell, J.: Climate Change and Small Island States: Power, Knowledge and the South Pacific, Earthscan, London, 2009. 
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Short summary
When authorities act apparently to protect communities from risks, including those made worse by climate change, there can be other motives at work. Through research in Rio de Janeiro we analyse how a favela clearance policy was brought in after landslides in 2010 with only weak technical justification. Favela dwellers, activists and counter-experts formed a network to contest these moves, challenge the risk assessments undertaken and build a partially successful resistance to an unjust policy.