Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
Alternativ können Sie versuchen, selbst über Ihren lokalen Bibliothekskatalog auf das gewünschte Dokument zuzugreifen.
Bei Zugriffsproblemen kontaktieren Sie uns gern.
50 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Globalization, Technological Change, and Public Education documents the dramatic changes taking place in public education through the incorporation of new information technologies. These additions to the public school environment have generally been seen as enabling tools to help students and nations compete in the global marketplace. Yet a closer look at the interplay of technological change and organizational restructuring suggests the emergence of new, less promising power relations. Through detailed ethnographic research and interviews in the Los Angeles public school system, Torin Monah
In: Critical issues in crime and society
SSRN
In: Cultural studies, Band 35, Heft 4-5, S. 946-967
ISSN: 1466-4348
This essay reflects on the many upheavals of the past year and their implications for critical scholarship on surveillance. The COVID-19 pandemic, anti-science policies, radicalized white supremacists, police killings of people of color, and the resurgence of the racial justice movement all inflect surveillance practices in the contemporary moment. In particular, today's polarized political landscape makes it difficult to condemn surveillance in the service of the public good, but irrespective of one's goals or intentions, the embrace of transparency carries its own risks. Transparency, and scientific vision more broadly, is an extension of the Enlightenment and subsequent scientific revolution, which from the start sought to advance knowledge and consolidate white power through the violent subjugation of nature, women, and racial minorities. One fundamental risk of valorizing transparency is that doing so occludes the ways that relations of domination are indelibly encoded into surveillance systems and practices. Given this, I argue that the project of decolonizing surveillance inquiry should now be our primary focus as a field.
BASE
In: Monahan, Torin. 2021. Visualizing the Surveillance Archive: Critical Art and the Dangers of Transparency. In Law and the Visible, edited by A. Sarat, L. Douglas and M. M. Umphrey. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 130-155.
SSRN
In: Cultural studies, Band 32, Heft 4, S. 560-581
ISSN: 1466-4348
In: Monahan, Torin. 2018. The Image of the Smart City: Surveillance Protocols and Social Inequality. In Handbook of Cultural Security, edited by Y. Watanabe. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 210-226.
SSRN
In: The information society: an international journal, Band 32, Heft 4, S. 229-240
ISSN: 1087-6537
In: The sociological quarterly: TSQ, Band 52, Heft 4, S. 495-508
ISSN: 1533-8525
In: Social justice: a journal of crime, conflict and world order, Band 37, Heft 2, S. 84-99
ISSN: 1043-1578, 0094-7571
In: Cultural studies - critical methodologies, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 286-305
ISSN: 1552-356X
In: Cultural studies - critical methodologies, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 286-305
ISSN: 1552-356X
Modern surveillance systems operate upon masculine logics of disembodied control at a distance. As such, they artificially abstract bodies, identities, and interactions from social contexts in ways that both obscure and aggravate gender and other social inequalities. This article explores the gender dimensions of surveillance systems in several public domains: welfare, healthcare, and transportation. By exposing the dominant rationalities of such systems and critiquing the discourses that support them, one can challenge the supposed neutrality of such technologies and question the power relations to which they give rise. The goal of this article, therefore, is to introduce a new line of inquiry into gender and surveillance, one that perceives surveillance as operating on the level of abstraction but with embodied effects for women and men.