Data Politics Worlds, Subjects, Rights
Data has become a social and political issue because of its capacity to reconfigure relationships between states, subjects, and citizens. This book explores how data has acquired such an important capacity and examines how critical interventions in its uses in both theory and practice are possible....
Uložené v:
| Hlavní autori: | , , |
|---|---|
| Médium: | E-kniha Kniha |
| Jazyk: | English |
| Vydavateľské údaje: |
Oxford
Routledge
2019
Taylor and Francis No Funder Information Available Taylor & Francis |
| Vydanie: | 1 |
| Edícia: | Routledge Studies in International Political Sociology |
| Predmet: | |
| ISBN: | 135168258X, 9781351682589, 1138053252, 9781138053250, 9781138053267, 1138053260, 1351682563, 9781315167305, 9781351682572, 9781351682565, 1315167301, 1351682571 |
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- Conclusions: three forms of data oblivion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 13: Data citizens: how to reinvent rights -- Introduction -- Right to the city, right to data -- Citizen data, urban worlds -- Conclusion: Propositions for citizen data and urban worlds -- Acknowledgments -- Note -- Bibliography -- Chapter 14: Data rights: claiming privacy rights through international institutions -- Introduction -- Why data citizens? -- Data citizen -- Data citizens and international human rights: the ICCPR -- Personal data sharing among states - hastening the emergence of the data citizen? -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index
- The transnational space of intelligence: the structural modalities and dispositions of actors regarding the digital -- Concluding remarks -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Chapter 7: From fake to junk news: the data politics of online virality -- Junk news is not about algorithmic persuasion -- Junk news as a viral pollution -- Five modes of junk news production -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 8: Seeing like Big Tech: security assemblages, technology, and the future of state bureaucracy -- Shifting public-private assemblages in the security field -- Bureaucracies in the age of data governance -- The Government Machine and the rule of law -- References -- PART III: Subjects -- Chapter 9: Towards data justice: bridging anti-surveillance and social justice activism -- The Snowden leaks and political activism -- Anti-surveillance and techno-legal resistance -- Resistance to datafication amongst political activists -- Responses to Snowden -- Resisting data collection -- "Data justice" and the bridging of activism(s) -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 10: Theses on automation and labour -- Automation has already happened -- Automation makes futures -- Automation needs data -- Automation intensifies extraction -- Automation adapts to environments -- Automation fails -- References -- Chapter 11: Data's empire: postcolonial data politics -- Postcolonial data politics -- Governing peoples: biopolitics and empire -- Governing postcolonial peoples -- Decolonising data's empire -- References -- PART IV: Rights -- Chapter 12: The right to data oblivion -- Introduction: accumulation of digital data in the information society -- The life and death of digital data -- A first legal-informatics issue: data portability -- A second legal-informatics issue: the right to be forgotten -- The impossibility of a technological oblivion
- Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of illustrations -- Figures -- Table -- Textbox -- List of contributors -- The editors -- The contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 1: Data politics -- Introduction -- What is data politics? -- Part I: conditions of possibility of data politics -- Part II: worlds -- Part III: subjects -- Part IV: rights -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- PART I: Conditions of possibility of data politics -- Chapter 2: Knowledge infrastructures under siege: climate data as memory, truce, and target -- Introduction -- "Long data" and environmental knowledge -- The glass laboratory -- Truces as targets: three climate data controversies of the early 21st century -- New fronts in the siege -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3: Against infrasomatization: towards a critical theory of algorithms -- "Freedom" -- "Chaos" -- Conclusions -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Chapter 4: Surveillance capitalism, surveillance culture and data politics -- Introduction -- Surveillance capitalism -- Surveillance culture -- Situating surveillance culture, surveillance capitalism -- Data politics and an optics of hope -- Note -- References -- PART II: Worlds -- Chapter 5: Mutual entanglement and complex sovereignty in cyberspace -- The territorialization impulse in cyberspace -- The United States and the transformation of cyberspace -- The extraterritorial projection of autocratic power -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- Chapter 6: Digital data and the transnational intelligence space -- Introduction -- Data, information, intelligence: data as performances and products of competition between intelligence agencies -- Data ownership: an electronic encomienda -- Intelligence data: the work and competitions of intelligence actors

