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surveillance

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Published: 01 September 2014
Figure 1 Aerial surveillance image shown during Colin Powell’s presentation to the UN Security Council, February 5, 2003. Image courtesy GlobalSecurity.org More
Journal Article
Public Culture (2014) 26 (3 (74)): 469–500.
Published: 01 September 2014
...Figure 1 Aerial surveillance image shown during Colin Powell’s presentation to the UN Security Council, February 5, 2003. Image courtesy GlobalSecurity.org ...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (2 (97)): 167–193.
Published: 01 May 2022
...Darren Byler Abstract This article examines the digital enclosure of Muslim minority data and labor through a techno-political “reeducation” system in Northwest China to make a broader argument about the way surveillance capitalism can be linked to ethno-racialization. Specifically, it considers...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 625–644.
Published: 01 September 2019
... crimes such as domestic violence, sexual assault, and sex work or sex trafficking. Thus women, sex workers, and gender-nonconforming people may be disproportionately excluded from any benefits of bodycam surveillance. But privacy and dignity interests, as well as investigatory realities, preclude...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2023) 35 (1 (99)): 49–71.
Published: 01 January 2023
... agential ambivalence, where feelings of control apply to tactics for managing surveillance and to reckless risk-taking are key. Agential ambivalence is required to “stay alive” in Cairo. The activists the author knows still take extreme risks and sometimes even make seemingly careless decisions...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2018) 30 (3): 413–439.
Published: 01 September 2018
... of financial and other value from life itself. Visiting the US-Mexico and Euro-African borders in turn, it considers biotechnologies for surveillance and detection; detention and “warehousing”; and risk strategies for deterring migration, in each case delving into the political economy of human vitality...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2021) 33 (1 (93)): 89–111.
Published: 01 January 2021
... scripts of biopolitical surveillance and patrol relied on in forcible-entry raids, stop and frisk, and executions of orders to “report and deport.” Copyright 2021 by Duke University Press 2021 untranslatability political philology translation justice This article is conceived as the fourth...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2014) 26 (2 (73)): 257–280.
Published: 01 May 2014
... and Antarctica, the essay examines satellite vision produced by the Cold War systems of surveillance, particularly as inscribed by New Zealand author James George. The conclusion of the essay turns to ways these technologies are constitutive of visions of the global in the Anthropocene. 2014 Cosgrove...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2017) 29 (1 (81)): 27–51.
Published: 01 January 2017
...Rogier van Reekum; Willem Schinkel Migration cannot be readily seen. Yet the study of contemporary migration control and border management, particularly with respect to Europe, abounds in the use of ocular terminology, such as surveillance and monitoring . We approach these issues by asking how...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2017) 29 (2 (82)): 385–414.
Published: 01 May 2017
... is shrinking and control over its use has tightened considerably through zero-tolerance policing, growing surveillance, privatization, and gentrification. It argues that significant developments in digital media (e.g., the spread of mobile devices, photo sharing, blogging, and social networking sites) have...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2020) 32 (1): 185–213.
Published: 01 January 2020
... and political order in the name of law, and by the subjects who are obliged to participate in their creation: staging and documenting their own performance to become or remain lawful citizens. Examining this kind of visual surveillance and the “extraterritorial” quality of the produced images, a line is drawn...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (1 (96)): 21–45.
Published: 01 January 2022
...Angela Xiao Wu Abstract Much attention to affective computing has focused on its alleged ability to “tap into human affects,” a trope also foundational to broader theorizations about big‐data surveillance. What remains understudied and undertheorized is affective computing's social life, where...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 419–445.
Published: 01 September 2019
... crises and threats simultaneously participates in and revivifies an emergency logic of the state through which drone violence, surveillance, and humanitarian interventions operate routinely even as they emerge as exceptional within popular technocultural imaginaries. The co-constituting convergence...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2016) 28 (1 (78)): 3–8.
Published: 01 January 2016
... of photochemically, electronically, or digitally captured visuals. For Foucault (1977) , it was as much about the dangers of institutionalized investments in the linkages between surveillance and criminal justice, imagination and imprisonment. Jeremy Bentham’s seventeenth-century renderings of the Panopticon...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (3 (98)): 365–373.
Published: 01 September 2022
... witnessing act in this continuum that is city-making in connection with uncertainty and opacity. [email protected] Copyright 2022 by Duke University Press 2022 housing surveillance displacement power city-making Drawing on Arjun Appadurai's ( 2013 ) idea that housing...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (1994) 6 (3): 547–575.
Published: 01 September 1994
... as a mode of distrustful surveillance. Our reading of Bentham’s chapter supports a Foucauldian reading. Next, we examine Bentham’s views on “publicity”in their historical and textual context. On the surface the historical context (the Essay...
Image
Published: 01 January 2017
Figure 5 Sketches illustrating Oscar Newman’s concept of defensible space. Left: “territorial definition reinforced with surveillance opportunities.” Right: “defensible space hierarchy in multi-level dwelling.” From Newman 1972 : 9, 10 More
Journal Article
Public Culture (1997) 10 (1): 24–60.
Published: 01 January 1997
... capture, seeing it as a sure harbinger of sudden death. Both paramilitaries and noncombatants in the communities paramilitaries live or operate in (particularly Catholic communi- ties) are subjected to totalizing optical surveillance by the state; this includes video cameras mounted on street corners...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2015) 27 (2 (76)): 213–219.
Published: 01 May 2015
... problems than it is about discovering better — and more relevant — research questions. 2015 big data public health disease surveillance In the fall of 2009, in the midst of the first global flu pandemic of this century, I was doing ethnographic fieldwork in the US Centers for Disease Control...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2018) 30 (1): 143–171.
Published: 01 January 2018
... the norm ( Gusterson and Besteman 2009) . This insecurity and a loss of confidence in traditional institutions in the neoliberal era have led to widespread “lateral surveillance,” a process that involves people surveilling one another through various new technologies ( Andrejevic 2007) . While the “See...
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