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[ecrea] Ethical implications of Snowden revelations - Second Call for Papers for special edition - Ethical Space
Thu Feb 05 02:38:43 GMT 2015
Ethical Space
Second Call for Papers: Ethical implications of Snowden revelations
The unauthorised release of documents from the National Security Agency
by dissident contractor Edward Snowden has raised a new set of ethical
questions for the media, politicians, the national security state and
the public. Snowden has revealed that, as a result of the pervasive
nature of modern electronic communications, we have sleepwalked into the
mass surveillance state, capable of documenting the citizens’ every
electronic communication and much, much, more. This surveillance state
is far more extensive that anything that could have been conceived by
the Stasi. Yet the publication of Snowden’s material by leading news
organisations has been challenged not only by the states concerned, but
also others parts of the news media, the academy and the public in those
countries. Some have found mass surveillance reassuring and others felt
able to ignore the Snowden disclosures.
Ethical Space is planning a special double issue at the end of 2015 to
examine the ethical issues in this contested discourse. This could
include ethical issues around mass surveillance, the secret state,
privacy and the media publication of the Snowden revelations. Ethical
Space’s editors believe the implication of Snowden’s revelations is so
profound that it needs multidisciplinary response. In addition to the
journal’s existing and established media based community, the editors
solicit papers from other disciplines including intelligence studies,
political studies, criminology, psychology, law and computing. They
could include the ethical issues of new concepts such sousveillance. For
example, we are interested in whether the collective knowledge of a mass
surveillance state will alter the citizen’s behaviour and what would the
consequence of that might be, a question on the ethics of social
engineering, that might be best answered by a behavioural psychologist.
Was the collection of data by the NSA network legal for each country
involved? A lawyer may be best able to answer. What part has
‘patriotism’ played in media coverage of this global story? What are
ethics of patriotism?
Expression of interest can be registered by submitting a 250 word
abstract by the 31 March 2015. Please send abstracts to
(paul.lashmar /at/ brunel.ac.uk)
Ethical Space website: http://www.communicationethics.net/espace/
Publication guidelines can be found at:
http://www.communicationethics.net/espace/index.php?nav=guide
Editors, Professor Richard Keeble and Donald Matheson, have invited Paul
Lashmar, of Brunel University, who specialises in the relationship
between intelligence agencies and the media, to be guest editor of this
issue.
www.paullashmar.com
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