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Seeing Surveillance: Twenty Years of Surveillance & Society
This paper reflects on the development of surveillance studies over the twenty years since the first publication of Surveillance & Society. It starts by pointing to key contextual changes that have provided fertile ground for surveillance-focused analysis and, in turn, shaped the emphasis of the field.
P. Fussey
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Postmodern Kültürde Gözetim Toplumunun Dönüşümü: ‘Panoptikon’dan ‘Sinoptikon’ ve ‘Omniptikon’a
Modernizmden postmodernizme uzanan tarihsel süreç içerisinde gözetim, bilgi iletişim teknolojilerinde yaşanan sınırları zorlayan gelişmelerle birlikte hem niceliksel hem de niteliksel olarak değişime uğramış ve bu değişim, yeni eleştirileri de ...
Selin Bitirim Okmeydan
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In the United States, colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer diagnosed among men and women and the second leading cause of death from cancer.
Robert A Smith +2 more
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Subjunctive and Interpassive “Knowing” in the Surveillance Society
The Snowden affair marked not a switch from ignorance to informed enlightenment, but a problematisation of knowing as a condition. What does it mean to know of a surveillance apparatus that recedes from your sensory experience at every turn?
Sun-ha Hong
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Surveillance | Society | Culture [PDF]
Abteilung Nordamerikastudien +3 more
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Waking Up to the Surveillance Society
In February 2009 the House of Lords Constitutional Committee in the United Kingdom published the report Surveillance: Citizens and the State. Some have hailed this as a landmark document. The following is one of four commentaries that the editors of Surveillance & Society solicited in response to the report.
N. K. Hayles
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Keeping our Surveillance Society Non-Totalitarian
<p>In modern technologically advanced societies citizens leave numerous identifiable digital traces that are being stored, monitored and processed by both private and public parties. This has led to what is commonly called a 'surveillance society'.
Bart Jacobs
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Power in the modern ‘surveillance society’: From theory to methodology
The rapid expansion of new Information and Communication Technologies has improved the possibilities for surveillance, rendering modern society a ‘surveillance society’ (Lyon, 2006). Surveillance practices today comprise a myriad of actors.
Catharina Rudschies
semanticscholar +1 more source
Surveillance, as an important matter in the modern era, continues its existence as a former phenomenon of the digital world with new forms. Another output of the modern era is the ever-increasing and diversified phenomenon of risk.
Esra Serdar Tekeli
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Cancer is one of the most expensive medical conditions to treat worldwide, affecting national and local spending, as well as household budgets for patients and their families.
Jingxuan Zhao, K. Robin Yabroff
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