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[Commlist] New book: The Informational Logic of Human Rights: Network Imaginaries in the Cybernetic Age
Sun Dec 04 18:02:01 GMT 2022
Josh Bowser's book The Informational Logic of Human Rights has been
published. It is the most recent volume in the Technicities book series:
https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-the-informational-logic-of-human-rights.html
The Informational Logic of Human Rights
Network Imaginaries in the Cybernetic Age
Joshua Bowsher
Shows how digital capitalism has shaped human rights practices
Offers an in-depth and critical examination of the processes and
pitfalls of human rights
Contributes an original theoretical approach that intervenes in
influential and current debates regarding the limits of human rights
Uses three ‘case studies’ based on particular human rights
practices – conceptualizing violations as events, using indicators to
monitor social and economic rights and the contemporary uses of machine
learning and big data
Provides new theoretical tools that can support ongoing efforts to
articulate a more radical vision of human rights
What happens to the cultural politics of human rights when atrocities
are rendered calculable, abuses are transformed into data, and victims
become vectors? As human rights organizations have increasingly embraced
information technologies this ‘datafication’ of rights has become both a
reality and a pressing concern, one inextricably tangled up with
questions regarding the broader political valences of human rights.
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Beyond the Neoliberal Critique?
1. Cybernetic Capitalism/Informational ‘Politics’
2. Seeing Violations as Events: Technologies of Capture and Cutting
3. Doing Rights as Indicators: Informatizing Social and Economic Rights
4. When Violations Become Vectors: Human Rights Work in the Era of Big Data
5. After Informational Logic: Rethinking Information/Rethinking Rights
Notes
Into the struggle to understand how human rights politics arose in
tandem with the neoliberal economics of our times steps Josh Bowsher
with a revelatory new framework. The age of human rights has also been
the age of information -- and the informational mode prevalent in our
phase of capitalism has caged a potentially radical politics. Exploring
how this has happened, often reducing movements to shame and stigma,
without engaging distribution and redistribution as readily, this
intrepid book also looks to a future liberated from existing limitations.
– Samuel Moyn, Yale University
Josh Bowsher is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Sussex,
following a recently completed Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship at
Brunel University. Broadly speaking, Josh’s research explores the
often-fraught relationships between human rights discourses,
contemporary capitalism and radical change. His work has been published
in Social & Legal Studies, The European Journal of Social Theory, New
Formations, and Theory & Event.
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