Several of my questions were marked as duplicate, [IMHO] without justification
I'm curious about your idea of "several". In the last six months, I only found three questions of yours that had ever been marked as duplicate (including the one you reference here). Only one of them is still closed.
I don't have enough experience with Haskell and the questions here to comment much on the question you're referencing here, but would agree that the proposed duplicate doesn't directly address your question. Still, I did find other Haskell questions that appear to more directly address the question of dealing with the "Couldn't match type" error message in the context of combinators. It's possible the question really is a duplicate, just not of the one chosen when it was closed.
Further, while I'd agree that the question about Git hunk granularity was marked duplicate against the wrong question, I'd say there's a strong argument that it is a duplicate of Can I split an already split hunk with git? And the question about ?-mix:
in Ruby regex seems even more clearly a duplicate; it's still marked as a duplicate and the title of the marked duplicate is almost exactly the same as your title, and frankly the question is presented more clearly than yours was.
In other words, while it's possible there's been some errors made by the community, I wouldn't say your record is 100% clean either. Part of what you could improve is to do a better job posting questions that aren't already answered in some fashion on Stack Overflow.
(Though, it does seem to me that considering the number of questions you've posted, there has not been too excessive a number of those marked as duplicate. It might be a little higher than one would hope for, but I'm sure there are people with far worse records, and who need a lot more help in figuring out how to post a good question.)
The best thing you can do to avoid getting questions marked as duplicates is to be very thorough in your research. It is nearly guaranteed that you will find a number of questions at least somewhat relevant to your own; if you're sure your question isn't a duplicate of those, then go ahead and post your question but be clear at the top about what you found, how it relates to your question, and why specifically your question is different (i.e. simply saying "my question isn't a duplicate of that one" isn't going to help much).
And of course, if you're not sure the question isn't a duplicate, spend more time looking for your answer in the information your research uncovered. Quite often, your answer will be there, even though not expressed exactly the way you were hoping for.
If there's any room for improvement in your own case, it seems to me it would be that.
Even after all that effort, there's no guarantee your question won't be marked as a duplicate. One reason to go to so much effort when posting a question is that it will help differentiate you from the typical person who posts a question to Stack Overflow. But unfortunately, the flip side of that is that the typical person who posts a question is fairly sloppy and lazy, and very frequently posts a duplicate question.
For those of us who care about the quality of the site, we work aggressively to try to stem the tide of this sort of thing, but that means every now and then a good question will get caught up in the net. For what it's worth the false-positive rate is very low; the number of actual duplicate questions far out-numbers the number of questions incorrectly marked as a duplicate.
Fortunately, the community is usually pretty good about undoing the mistake. Frankly, if anything the community is overly generous, reopening questions that really should remain closed. But that means that for a question that really was mistakenly marked as a duplicate, you should be able to get it reopened reasonably quickly.