Digital citizenship in a datafied society
Intro -- Table of Contents -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: Citizens, Data and Surveillance -- Starting-points: Data and Surveillance Studies -- The Snowden Revelations and the Datafied Society -- Historicizing and Studying Datafication and Citizenship -- Structure of the Book -- 1: Citizenship in a Digital Age -- Citizenship -- From Digital Acts to Digital Citizenship -- Digital Restrictions -- Digital Citizenship and Datafication -- Conclusion -- 2: Datafication and Surveillance -- 'Data Is the New Oil' and Other Stories -- The Snowden Leaks as Big Data Surveillance -- The Datafied Society -- Conclusion -- 3: Regulating Datafication -- Actors, Factors and Contexts of Policy Reform -- Data Policy Before and After Snowden -- The UK IPAct: Interests and Controversies -- The Role of Social Forces: Influencing the IPAct -- Conclusion: Policies for Digital Citizenship? -- Notes -- 4: Mediating Digital Citizenship -- Media, Citizenship and Datafication -- Justifying the Datafied Society -- Who is Being Watched? The Invisibility of Mass Surveillance -- Critiquing the Normalization of Surveillance: Journalists' Discourses -- The normalization of surveillance -- The limits of media coverage and public knowledge -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 5: Understanding and Negotiating Digital Environments -- The Snowden Leaks and 'Surveillance Culture' -- Manifestations of a 'Chilling Effect' -- Negotiating Concerns -- Digital Resignation and Surveillance Realism -- Conclusion -- Note -- 6: Challenging Datafication -- Conditions for Resistance: Movement Dynamics, Imaginaries and Materialities -- Forms of Resistance: Protest, Technology, Policy and Data Activism -- The Limits of Resistance -- Towards a Broader Movement? -- Conclusion -- Conclusion: Enabling Digital Citizenship in a Datafied Society