Introduction to The Routledge Handbook of Epistemic InjusticePART 1 Core concepts1 Varieties of epistemic injustice2 Varieties of testimonial injustice3 Varieties of hermeneutical injustice4 Evolving concepts of epistemic injustice5 Epistemic injustice as distributive injustice6 Trust, distrust, and epistemic injustice7 Forms of knowing and epistemic resources8 Epistemic responsibility9 IdeologyPART 2 Liberatory epistemologies and axes of oppression10 Intersectionality and epistemic injustice11 Feminist epistemology: the subject of knowledge12 Epistemic injustice and the philosophy of race13 Decolonial praxis and epistemic injustice14 Queer epistemology and epistemic injustice15 Allies behaving badly: gaslighting as epistemic injustice16 Knowing disability, differentlyPART 3 Schools of thought and subfields within epistemology17 Power/knowledge/resistance: Foucault and epistemic injustice18 Epistemic injustice and phenomenology19 On the harms of epistemic injustice: pragmatism and transactional20 Social epistemology and epistemic injustice21 Testimonial injustice, epistemic vice, and vice epistemologyPART 4 Socio-political, ethical, and psychological dimensions of knowing22 Implicit bias, stereotype threat, and epistemic injustice23 What’s wrong with epistemic injustice? Harm, vice, objectification, misrecognition24 Epistemic and political agency25 Epistemic and political freedom26 Epistemic communities and institutions27 Objectivity, epistemic objectification, and oppressionPART 5 Case studies of epistemic injustice28 Epistemic justice and the law29 Epistemic injustice: the case of digital environments30 Epistemic injustice in science31 Education and epistemic injustice32 Epistemic injustice in medicine and healthcare33 Epistemic injustice and mental illness34 Indigenous peoples, anthropology, and the legacy of epistemic injustice35 Epistemic injustice and cultural heritage36 Epistemic injustice and religion37 Philosophy and philosophical practice: Eurocentrism as an epistemology of ignorance