Archive for 2022

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[Commlist] New book: National Security Surveillance in Southern Africa: An Anti-Capitalist Perspective

Wed Aug 10 14:04:07 GMT 2022






Jane Duncan is happy to announce that my new book has been published by Zed Books. It is called National Security Surveillance in Southern Africa: An Anti-Capitalist Perspective. The book is available here:https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/national-security-surveillance-in-southern-africa-9780755640225/ <https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/national-security-surveillance-in-southern-africa-9780755640225/>

It has been published as a hardback and an e-book, and the softback and open access editions will follow.

A description is below:


  National Security Surveillance in Southern Africa


      An Anti-Capitalist Perspective


          Jane Duncan (Author)
          <https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/author/jane-duncan/>


*Description*

In spite of Edward Snowden's disclosures about government abuses of dragnet communication surveillance, the surveillance industry continues to expand around the world. Many people have become resigned to a world where they cannot have a reasonable expectation of privacy.

The author looks at what can be done to rein in these powers and restructure how they are used beyond the limited and often ineffective reforms that have been attempted. Using southern Africa as a backdrop, and its liberation history, Jane Duncan examines what an anti-capitalist perspective on intelligence and security powers could look like. Are the police and intelligence agencies even needed, and if so, what should they do and why? What lessons can be learnt from how security was organised during the struggles for liberation in the region?

Southern Africa is seeing thousands of people in the region taking to the streets in protests. In response, governments are scrambling to acquire surveillance technologies to monitor these new protest movements. Southern Africa faces no major terrorism threats at the moment, which should make it easier to develop clearer anti-surveillance campaigns than in Europe or the US. Yet, because of tactical and strategic ambivalence about security powers, movements often engage in limited calls for intelligence and policing reforms, and fail to provide an alternative vision for policing and intelligence. /Surveillance and Intelligence in Southern Africa/ examines what that vision could look like.

*Table of Contents*

*Chapter One: The Global Conveyer Belt of Security Practices
Chapter Two: Intelligence and Security in Southern Africa
Chapter Three: Lawful Interception, Targeting and Social Control
Chapter Four: Signals Intelligence and National Security
Chapter Five: The Global Trade in Spyware
Chapter Six: Police as Spies: Intelligence-led Policing and Securitisation of Policing
Chapter Seven: Us and Them: Securitising Home Affairs
Chapter Eight: Doing Surveillance Differently? BRICS and Surveillance in Southern Africa*

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