JUST PUBLISHED
THE NEW POLITICS OF SURVEILLANCE AND VISIBILITY edited by Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson. University of Toronto Press
Contributions:
The New Politics of Surveillance and Visibility
Kevin Haggerty and Richard Ericson
Part One: Theorizing Surveillance and Visibility
September 11, Synopticon, and Scopophilioa: Watching and Being Watched
David Lyon
Welcome to the Society of Control: The Simulation of Surveillance
William Bogard
Varieties of Personal Information as Determinants of Attitudes Toward Surveillance
Gary Marx
Struggling with Surveillance: Resistance, Consciousness, and Identity
John Gilliom
Part Two: Police and Military Surveillance
A Faustian Bargain? America and the Dream of Total Information Awareness
Reg Whitaker
Surveillance Fiction or Higher Policing
Jean-Paul Brodeur and Stéphane Leman-Langlois
An Alternative Current in Surveillance and Control: Broadcasting Surveillance Footage of Crimes
Aaron Doyle
Surveillance and Military Transformation: Organizational Trends in 21st Century Armed Services
Chris Dandeker
Visible War: Surveillance and the Speed of Information Wars
Kevin Haggerty
Part Three: Surveillance, Electronic Media and Consumer Culture
11 Cracking the Code: Advertisers, Anxiety and Surveillance in the Digital Age
Joseph Turow
(En)Visioning the Television Audience: Revisiting Questions of Power in
the Age of Interactive Television
Serra Tinic
Cultures of Mania: Towards an Anthropology of Mood
Emily Martin
Surveillant Internet Technologies and the Growth in Information Capitalism: Spams and Public Trust in the Information Society
David Wall
Data Mining, Surveillance and Discrimination in the Post-9/11 Environment
Oscar Gandy Jr.
|