Surveillance As Social Sorting: Privacy, Risk, and Digital Discrimination

Hardcover
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Author: David Lyon

ISBN-10: 0415278724

ISBN-13: 9780415278720

Category: Databases Security

Surveillance happens to all of us, everyday, as we walk beneath street cameras, swipe cards, surf the net. Agencies are using increasingly sophisticated computer systems - especially searchable databases - to keep tabs on us at home, work and play. Once the word surveillance was reserved for police activities and intelligence gathering, now it is an unavoidable feature of everyday life.\ Surveillance as Social Sorting proposes that surveillance is not simply a contemporary threat to...

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Surveillance happens to all of us, everyday, as we walk beneath street cameras, swipe cards, surf the net. Agencies are using increasingly sophisticated computer systems - especially searchable databases - to keep tabs on us at home, work and play. Once the word surveillance was reserved for police activities and intelligence gathering, now it is an unavoidable feature of everyday life.Surveillance as Social Sorting proposes that surveillance is not simply a contemporary threat to individual freedom, but that, more insidiously, it is a powerful means of creating and reinforcing long-term social differences. As practiced today, it is actually a form of social sorting - a means of verifying identities but also of assessing risks and assigning worth. Questions of how categories are constructed therefore become significant ethical and political questions.Bringing together contributions from North America and Europe, Surveillance as Social Sorting offers an innovative approach to the interaction between societies and their technologies. It looks at a number of examples in depth and will be an appropriate source of reference for a wide variety of courses.

List of contributorsPreface and acknowledgementsIntroduction1Pt. IOrientations111Surveillance as social sorting: computer codes and mobile bodies132Theorizing surveillance: the case of the workplace313Biometrics and the body as information: normative issues of the socio-technical coding of the body57Pt. IIVerifying identities: constituting life-chances754Electronic identity cards and social classification775Surveillance creep in the genetic age946"Racial" categories and health risks: epidemiological surveillance among Canadian First Nations111Pt. IIIRegulating mobilities: places and spaces1357Privacy and the phenetic urge: geodemographics and the changing spatiality of local practice1378People and place: patterns of individual identification within intelligent transportation systems1539Netscapes of power: convergence, network design, walled gardens, and other strategies of control in the information age176Pt. IVTargeting trouble: social divisions19910Categorizing the workers: electronic surveillance and social ordering in the call center20111Private security and surveillance: from the "dossier society" to database networks22612From personal to digital: CCTV, the panopticon, and the technological mediation of suspicion and social control249Index282