Very Short Introductions: Brilliant, Sharp, Inspiring
Surveillance permeates every aspect of our lives today. Once a more limited and often remote aspect of social life, today surveillance is central to political, economic, and everyday life. Every click on the keyboard, every call, text or email, every purchase, every contact with a doctor or the police or a government department, each time you walk under a video camera or pass through a security check, and in many other ways, you are recorded, identified, traced, and tracked. Who processes this free-flowing data, how, and with what consequences, is a critical question affecting everyone.
This is not an alien conspiracy. It is the way today's digitally-dependent world works. Surveillance is not inherently good or bad but neither is it neutral. It urgently needs to be understood better because people's lives and life-chances depend on it. Today surveillance is central to doing business, meeting friends, organizing governance, maintaining security, and being entertained. Surveillance requires not just exploration and understanding but ethical guidance and political debate. How you get credit or welfare benefits or get on a no-fly list or are ranked as a consumer depends on surveillance. This Very Short Introduction investigates how surveillance makes people visible, how it grew to its present size and prevalence, how it came to rely on technologies of data-handling, and how it developed its own cultural features. Throughout, David Lyon also considers the ethics of surveillance, and explores its potential in prompting political struggles.
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Surveillance is everywhere today, generating data about our purchasing, political, and personal preferences. This book shows how surveillance makes people visible and affects their lives, considers the technologies involved and how it grew to its present size and prevalence, and explores the pressing ethical questions surrounding it.
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1: Visible lives: invisible watchers
2: Visible lives: invisible watchers
3: Surveillance technologies in context
4: Data-driven surveillance: new challenges
5: Surveillance culture: an everyday reality
6: Questioning surveillance: critical probes
7: Encountering surveillance: What to do?
7: Surveillance: an optics of hope
Further Reading
Index
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David Lyon is former Director of the Surveillance Studies Centre and Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Law at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. He has directed several large-scale international research projects on surveillance, and has authored or edited a number of books, including The Culture of Surveillance (2018) and Surveillance after Snowden (2025). He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2008.
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Explores the scope of surveillanance in society today, and the ways in which data is gathered on people's lives
Considers the technologies involved in surveillance, and how it grew to its present size and prevalence
Considers the ethical and political debates surrounding surveillance today
Demonstrates how surveillance has a very tangible impact on our evryday lives
Part of the Very Short Introductions series - over ten million copies sold worldwide
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780198796848
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
148 gr
Høyde
175 mm
Bredde
110 mm
Dybde
10 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
176
Forfatter