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[ecrea] IJoC Publishers Special Section on Digital Citizenship and Surveillance Society
Thu Feb 16 09:52:43 GMT 2017
The International Journal of Communication Publishes Special Section Digital
Citizenship and Surveillance Society
The revelations by whistleblower Edward Snowden have transformed our
understanding of digital communication. Providing unprecedented insights
into Internet and telecommunications surveillance, they pointed us to the
ways in which the ‘datafication’ of increasing aspects of our lives have
become central to governance and control. What, then, are the implications
of ubiquitous surveillance for digital citizenship? How should we
understand the actions of citizens in a monitored and datafied
environment? In what ways do power relations between citizens and the
state shift ― and
with what avenues for intervention?
Guest-edited by Arne Hintz, Lina Dencik, Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Michael
Rogers and Ian Brown, this Special Section on Digital Citizenship and
Surveillance Society discusses the state of digital citizenship in the
aftermath of the Snowden revelations, based on findings from a two-year
UK-based research project. A first group of contributors present project
results on the implications of the Snowden leaks for journalism, public
knowledge, possibilities for dissent, technological infrastructure, and
regulatory frameworks. A second group ― renowned scholars from the fields
of surveillance, media and journalism studies, as well as representatives of
civil society organizations ― situate these findings in current
developments in datafied societies. Together, the articles present a
comprehensive analysis of the consequences of the Snowden leaks, and they
re-think digital citizenship in a post-Snowden world.
We invite you to read these articles that published in the International
Journal of Communication on February 15, 2017. We look forward to your
feedback!
Digital Citizenship and Surveillance Society – Editorial Introduction
Arne Hintz, Lina Dencik, Karin Wahl-Jorgensen
The Normalization of Surveillance and the Invisibility of Digital
Citizenship: Media Debates After the Snowden Revelations
Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Lucy Bennett, Gregory Taylor
The Advent of Surveillance Realism: Public Opinion and Activist
Responses to
the Snowden Leaks
Lina Dencik, Jonathan Cable
Enabling Digital Citizenship? The Reshaping of Surveillance Policy After
Snowden
Arne Hintz, Ian Brown
The Snowden Disclosures, Technical Standards and the Making of Surveillance
Infrastructures
Michael Rogers, Grace Eden
Surveillance Culture, Ethics and Digital Citizenship
David Lyon
Citizen Snowden
Engin Isin, Evelyn Ruppert
The Snowden Revelations and the Networked Fourth Estate
Adrienne Russell, Silvio Waisbord
To Pre-Empt a Thief
Mark Andrejevic
What Changed After Snowden? A U.S. Perspective ― Commentary
Ben Wizner
Compromising Over Technology, Security, and Privacy ― Commentary
Gus Hosein
_______________________________________________
Larry Gross Editor
Arlene Luck
Managing Editor
___________________________________________________
International Journal of Communication (IJoC)
USC Annenberg Press
University of Southern California
http://ijoc.org/
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