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[Commlist] CFP - The 9th Biennial Surveillance & Society Conference : Lines of sight
Thu Nov 21 22:00:46 GMT 2019
CALL FOR PAPER
*The 9th Biennial Surveillance & Society Conference of the Surveillance
Studies Network*
*Erasmus University *
*June 8-10 2020 *
*Rotterdam, The Netherlands.*
*
*
LINES OF SIGHT - Surveillance 20/20
Visual acuity has historically been measured based on the normative
value of 20/20 vision. Yet by the year 2020, the clarity of vision
regarding surveillance practices and their implications remains clouded.
The metaphors of vision and optics are central – and privileged –
components of surveillance research. This conference considers three
interrelated lines of sight to bring increased focus on understanding,
evaluating and responding to surveillance.
First, *the benefits of hindsight *call attention to surveillant
antecedents that inform or impinge upon current developments and
practices. Excavations into precursors of contemporary surveillance
illuminate potential ideals and expectations for emerging types of
monitoring.
Second, *new trajectories of (in)sight *articulate how surveillance
serves as a means for the collection and mediation of a wide range of
activities and behaviours. Particularly digital forms of information
gathering lend themselves to the rapid collation and comparison of
surveillance subjects in ways that both render them increasingly visible
and subject to various unanticipated, unwanted and unjust interventions.
Third, *the potentials of foresight *allow a focus on the emergent
character of surveillance indicative of new modalities of power, flows
of information, and challenges to freedom, autonomy and action. Given
the penchant for increased forms of control alongside various forms of
resistance, the question of surveillance futures and its response
remains crucial for continued analysis as well as social and political
forms of engagement.
These lines of sight prompt different sets of concerns across
(sub-)disciplines and approaches. We invite scholars, artists, and
practitioners from a wide range of (disciplinary) backgrounds to
critically engage with established and emergent surveillance practices,
and the various dilemmas, opportunities and ambivalences these represent.
*Key tracks of the conference include but are not limited to: *
*
*
●Re-envisioning surveillance histories
●Foreseeing futures
●Regulations, politics and governance of surveillance
●Science fiction and dystopian accounts
●Organisational, industrial and commercial visions
●Surveillance and the workplace
●Consumption and surveillance
●Medical surveillance
●Fraud detection and security
●Education and monitoring
●Viewing transitions
●Migration and refugees
●Borders and security
●Social movements and protests for change
●Electoral monitoring
●Digitally mediated surveillance
●Algorithms and focused monitoring
●Drones and security devices
●Social media platforms
●Mobile devices, including wearables
●Internet infrastructures
●IoT devices
●Big data analytics
●Sensing beyond seeing
●Critiques of visual metaphors
●Listening and other kinds of sensing
●Intersecting concepts and concerns
●Racialization
●Gender and identity
●Families and children
●Politics and social justice
●Policing and security
●Privacy (and critiques thereof)
●Ethics (in relation to citizenship, design and/or research)
●Bodies and biometrics
●Households and neighbourhoods
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