[Air-L] CFP: 4S Open Panel on Big Data Surveillance
Caelyn Randall
crandall2 at wisc.edu
Sun Jan 20 10:58:19 PST 2019
Call for Participation for 4S Open Panel on "A New/Old Technology for Governance? Questioning Big Data Surveillance”<https://www.4s2019.org/accepted-open-panels/>
Society for Social Studies of Sciences, New Orleans, LA, September 4-7, 2019Submission Deadline Feb 1, 2019
A NEW/OLD TECHNOLOGY FOR GOVERNANCE? QUESTIONING BIG DATA SURVEILLANCE
Driven by deterministic assumptions that the mere presence of information leads to positive social transformation (Srinivasan, Finn, & Ames, 2017), the era of big data has arrived (boyd & Crawford, 2012), bringing with it a series of critical questions that ask what big data surveillance looks like. As the titles of popular books and articles on the topic of big data surveillance such as Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy (O’Neil, 2016), “The Dystopia We Signed Up For” (Manning, 2017), and “How Big Data is Automating Inequality” (Eubanks, 2018) all underscore, the way in which big data is being imagined is as a new, nearly cataclysmic threat to public well-being. Such questions, however, may elide the ways in which big data surveillance is embedded within existing socio-political networks of power. As a technology of governance, big data surveillance constrains and enables the mobility of data/bodies asymmetrically. For example, surveillance, especially as an apparatus of state governance, has long been used for the social control of communities of color (Brown, 2015). Although big data surveillance may represent new, 21st century relations between private companies, universities, and the U.S. intelligence community (e.g. Amoore & Piotukh, 2015; O’Neil, 2016), it is still guided by a pre-existing and longstanding ideology of monitoring and controlling (Benjamin 2016). We invite papers that critically engage with big data surveillance practices, either by questioning the epistemological systems underpinning these practices or examining how these practices enable, constrain or distribute economic, political, and social mobilities.
Single paper submissions should be in the form of abstracts of up to 250 words. If you submit, select “Papers for Open Panels,” and then select “#2 A New/Old Technology for Governance? Questioning Big Data Surveillance."
Organizers:
Caelyn Randall, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Xerxes Minocher, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Caelyn Randall
Doctoral Candidate
Department of Communication Arts
University of Wisconsin-Madison
821 University Avenue
Madison, WI 53706
Pronouns: they/them/theirs
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