Surveillance is commonly rationalized as a practice to address
existing political or social problems such as crime, fraud, and
terrorism. This book explores how surveillance systems can, under the
guise of managing risk or reducing harm, cause or exacerbate a range
of problems, including poverty, over-policing, suspicion, and
exclusion. This volume presents essays written by Canadian scholars
who interrogate the moral and ideological bases and the material
effects of various surveillance practices and systems. The
contributors explore the relationship between surveillance and social
and political problems in a number of cultural locations and
institutional arenas: policing, consumerism, welfare administration,
disaster management, popular culture, moral regulation, news media,
social movements, and anti-terrorism campaigns. These original
theoretical and empirical essays examine and challenge us to consider
the question: How can we ensure a future in which the consequences of
surveillance are not taken for granted as normal, or necessary,
features of modern life?
Read more
Power, Problems, and Politics
Product details
ISBN
9780774816137
Published
2020
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
University of British Columbia Press
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author