Abstract
I analyze the relation between deliberative democracy and trust through the lens of epistemic
justice. I argue for three main claims: (i) the deliberative impasse dividing majority
and minority groups in many democracies is due to a particular type of epistemic
injustice, which I call ‘hermeneutical domination’; (ii) undoing hermeneutical domination
requires epistemic trust; and (iii) this epistemic trust is supported by the three
deliberative democratic requirements of equality, legitimacy, and accountability. In arguing
for those claims, I contribute to the conceptualization of both epistemic injustice
and domination, as well as to discussions of trust and deliberative democracy.