Routledge handbook of surveillance studies /
Saved in:
Imprint: | Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2012. |
---|---|
Description: | xxxi, 437 p. : ill. ; 26 cm. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Routledge international handbooks Routledge international handbooks. |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/8838733 |
Table of Contents:
- List of illustrations
- List of contributors
- Preface: "Your Papers please": personal and professional encounters with surveillance
- Introducing surveillance studies
- Part I. Understanding surveillance
- Introduction: Understanding surveillance
- Section 1.1. Theory I: After Foucault
- a. Panopticon-discipline-control
- b. Simulation and post-panopticism
- c. Surveillance as biopower
- Section 1.2. Theory II: Difference, politics, privacy
- a. "You shouldn't wear that body": The problematic of surveillance and gender
- b. The information state: An historical perspective on surveillance
- c. "Needs" for surveillance and the movement to protect privacy
- d. Race and surveillance
- Section 1.3. Cultures of surveillance
- a. Performing surveillance
- b. Ubiquitous surveillance
- c. Surveillance in literature, film and television
- d. Surveillance work(ers)
- Part II. Surveillance as sorting
- Introduction: Surveillance as sorting
- Section 2.1. Surveillance techniques
- a. Statistical surveillance: Remote sensing in the digital age
- b. Advertising's new surveillance ecosystem
- c. New technologies, security and surveillance
- Section 2.2. Social divisions of surveillance
- a. Colonialism and surveillance
- b. Identity, surveillance and modernity: Sorting out who's who
- c. The surveillance-industrial complex
- d. The body as data in the age of information
- Part III. Surveillance contexts
- Introduction: Contexts of surveillance
- Section 3.1. Population control
- a. Borders, identification and surveillance: New regimes of border control
- b. Urban spaces of surveillance
- c. Seeing population: Census and surveillance by numbers
- d. Surveillance and non-humans
- e. The rise of the surveillance school
- Section 3.2. Crime and policing
- a. Surveillance, crime and the police
- b. Crime, surveillance and the media
- c. The success of failure: Accounting for the global growth of CCTV
- d. Surveillance and urban violence in Latin America: Mega-cities, social division, security and surveillance
- Section 3.3. Security, intelligence, war
- a. Military surveillance
- b. Security, surveillance and democracy
- c. Surveillance and terrorism
- d. The globalization of homeland security
- Section 3.4. Production, consumption, administration
- a. Organization, employees and surveillance
- b. Public administration as surveillance
- c. Consumer surveillance: Context, perspectives and concerns in the personal information economy
- Section 3.5. Digital spaces of surveillance
- a. Globalization and surveillance
- b. Surveillance and participation on Web 2.0
- c. Hide and seek: Surveillance of young people on the internet
- Part IV. Limiting surveillance
- Introduction: Limiting surveillance
- Section 4.1. Ethics, law and policy
- a. A surveillance of care: Evaluating surveillance ethically
- b. Regulating surveillance: The importance of principles
- c. Privacy, identity and anonymity
- Section 4.2. Regulation and resistance
- a. Regulating surveillance technologies: Institutional arrangements
- b. Everyday resistance
- c. Privacy advocates, privacy advocacy and the surveillance society
- d. The politics of surveillance: Civil liberties, human rights and ethics
- Index