Digitizing Surveillance: Categorization, Space, Inequality

In this article, we seek to add to current debates about surveillance and society by critically exploring the social implications of a new and emerging raft of surveillance practices: those that specifically surround digital techniques and technologies. The article has four parts. In the first, we outline the nature of digital surveillance and consider how it differs from other forms of surveillance. The second part of the article explores the interconnections between digital techniques and the changing political economies of cities and urban societies. Here we explore the essential ambivalence of digital surveillance within the context of wider trends towards privatization, liberalization and social polarization. The third part provides some insights into particular aspects of digital surveillance through three examples: algorithmic video surveillance (in which closed circuit television systems are linked to software for the recognition of movement or identity); the increasingly prevalent practices of digital prioritization in transport and communications; and the medical surveillance of populations, wherein databases are created for increasingly mixed state and commercial medical purposes. Following this, in part four, we reflect on the policy and research implications raised by the spread of digital surveillance.

[1]  C. Norris From personal to digital : CCTV, the panopticon, and the technological mediation of suspicion and social control , 2005 .

[2]  Gary T. Marx,et al.  What’s new about the “new surveillance”?: Classifying for change and continuity , 2004 .

[3]  James H. Moor,et al.  Using genetic information while protecting the privacy of the soul , 1999, Ethics and Information Technology.

[4]  A. Barton The Surveillance Web , 2003 .

[5]  N. Thrift,et al.  The automatic production of space , 2002 .

[6]  Erich W. Schienke On the Outside Looking Out: an Interview with the Institute for Applied Autonomy (IAA) , 2002 .

[7]  Deborah G. Johnson,et al.  Data Retention and the Panoptic Society: The Social Benefits of Forgetfulness , 2002, Inf. Soc..

[8]  Steven Flusty,et al.  Thrashing Downtown: Play as resistance to the spatial and representational regulation of Los Angeles , 2000 .

[9]  Michaelis Lianos DANGERIZATION AND THE END OF DEVIANCE The Institutional Environment , 2000 .

[10]  R. Jones Digital Rule , 2000 .

[11]  DNA identification and surveillance creep , 1999 .

[12]  G. Mooney Public Health versus Private Practice: The Contested Development of Compulsory Infectious Disease Notification in Late-Nineteenth Century Britain , 1999, Bulletin of the history of medicine.

[13]  W. Madsen Big brother goes global , 1999 .

[14]  E. Cook Genetics and the British insurance industry. , 1999, Journal of medical ethics.

[15]  Irma van der Ploeg Written on the body: biometrics and identity , 1999, CSOC.

[16]  Jean-Luc Chabert,et al.  A History of Algorithms , 1999 .

[17]  Dan Schiller,et al.  Digital Capitalism: Networking the Global Market System , 1999 .

[18]  Lawrence Lessig,et al.  Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace , 1999 .

[19]  Stephen Graham,et al.  Spaces of Surveillant Simulation: New Technologies, Digital Representations, and Material Geographies , 1998 .

[20]  Clive Norris,et al.  Surveillance, Closed Circuit Television and Social Control , 1998 .

[21]  N. Thrift Cities without modernity, cities with magic , 1997 .

[22]  R. Pokorski Insurance underwriting in the genetic era , 1997, American journal of human genetics.

[23]  Paul Henman Computer Technology – a Political Player in Social Policy Processes , 1997, Journal of Social Policy.

[24]  N. Ellin Architecture of fear , 1997 .

[25]  John Hagan,et al.  Crime and Inequality , 1996 .

[26]  A. Carter,et al.  Public health surveillance: historical origins, methods and evaluation. , 1994, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[27]  Michael Batty The Geography of Cyberspace , 1993 .

[28]  Ian Spring,et al.  City of Quartz , 1992 .

[29]  Paul Virilio,et al.  The Lost Dimension , 1991 .

[30]  M. Foucault The Birth of the Clinic , 1963 .

[31]  Steven Flusty Building Paranoia , 2022, Public Space Reader.