The new politics of surveillance and visibility

Bibliographic Information

The new politics of surveillance and visibility

edited by Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson

(Green College lecture series)

University of Toronto Press, c2006

  • : cloth
  • : paper

Available at  / 8 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Since the terrorist attacks of September 2001, surveillance has been put forward as the essential tool for the ?war on terror,? with new technologies and policies offering police and military operatives enhanced opportunities for monitoring suspect populations. The last few years have also seen the public?s consumer tastes become increasingly codified, with ?data mines? of demographic information such as postal codes and purchasing records. Additionally, surveillance has become a form of entertainment, with ?reality? shows becoming the dominant genre on network and cable television. In The New Politics of Surveillance and Visibility, editors Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson bring together leading experts to analyse how society is organized through surveillance systems, technologies, and practices. They demonstrate how the new political uses of surveillance make visible that which was previously unknown, blur the boundaries between public and private, rewrite the norms of privacy, create new forms of inclusion and exclusion, and alter processes of democratic accountability. This collection challenges conventional wisdom and advances new theoretical approaches through a series of studies of surveillance in policing, the military, commercial enterprises, mass media, and health sciences.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments * The New Politics of Surveillance and Visibility KEVIN D. HAGGERTY and RICHARD V. ERICSON PART ONE: THEORIZING SURVEILLANCE AND VISIBILITY *9/11, Synopticon, and Scopophilia: Watching and Being Watched DAVID LYON * Welcome to the Society of Control: The Simulation of Surveillance Revisited WILLIAM BOGARD * Varieties of Personal Information as Influences on Attitudes towards Surveillance GARY T. MARX * Struggling with Surveillance: Resistance, Consciousness, and Identity JOHN GILLIOM PART TWO: POLICE AND MILITARY SURVEILLANCE * A Faustian Bargain? America and the Dream of Total Information Awareness * Surveillance Fiction or Higher Policing? JEAN-PAUL BRODEUR and STEPHANE LEMAN-LANGLOIS * An Alternative Current in Surveillance and Control: Broadcasting Surveillance Footage of Crimes AARON DOYLE * Surveillance and Military Transformation: Organizational Trends in Twenty-First-Century Armed Services CHRISTOPHER DANDEKER * Visible War: Surveillance, Speed, and Information War KEVIN D. HAGGERTY PART THREE: SURVEILLANCE, ELECTRONIC MEDIA, AND CONSUMER CULTURE * Cracking the Consumer Code: Advertisers, Anxiety, and Surveillance in the Digital Age JOSEPH TUROW *(En)Visioning the Television Audience: Revisiting Questions of Power in the Age of Interactive Television SERRA TINIC * Cultures of Mania: Towards an Anthropology of Mood EMILY MARTIN * Surveillant Internet Technologies and the Growth in Information Capitalism: Spams and Public Trust in the Information Society DAVID S. WALL * Data Mining, Surveillance, and Discrimination in the Post-9/11 Environment OSCAR GANDY JR Contributors

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