Journalism, citizenship and surveillance society

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Bibliographic Information

Journalism, citizenship and surveillance society

edited by Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Arne Hintz, Lina Dencik and Lucy Bennett

Routledge, 2020

  • : hbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book shows how surveillance society shapes and interacts with journalistic practices and discourses. It illustrates not only how surveillance debates play out in and through mediated discourses, but also how practices of surveillance inform the stories, everyday work and the ethics of journalists. The increasing entrenchment of data collection and surveillance in all kinds of social processes raises important questions around new threats to journalistic freedom and political dissent; the responsibilities of media organizations and state actors; the nature of journalists' relationship to the state; journalists' ability to protect their sources and data; and the ways in which media coverage shape public perceptions of surveillance, to mention just a few areas of concern. Against this backdrop, the contributions gathered in this book examine areas including media coverage of surveillance, encryption and privacy; journalists' views on surveillance and security; public debate around the power of intelligence agencies, and the strategies of privacy rights activists. The book raises fundamental questions around the role of journalism in creating the conditions for digital citizenship. The chapters in this book were originally published in a special issue of the journal, Digital Journalism.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Journalism, citizenship and surveillance 1. Surveillance and the Structural Transformation of Privacy: Mapping the conceptual landscape of journalism in the post-Snowden era 2. Not Interesting Enough to be Followed by the NSA: An analysis of Dutch privacy attitudes 3.Cryptic Journalism: News reporting of encryption 4. A "Massive and Unprecedented Intrusion": A comparative analysis of American journalistic discourse surrounding three government surveillance scandals 5. Chilling Effect: Regional journalists' source protection and information security practice in the wake of the Snowden and Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA) revelations 6. "Comparative Silence" Still? Journalism, academia, and the Five Eyes of Edward Snowden 7. Framing Resistance Against Surveillance: Political communication of privacy advocacy groups in the "Stop Watching Us" and "The Day We Fight Back" campaigns 8. Surveillance Normalization and Critique: News coverage and journalists' discourses around the Snowden revelations

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