Special Issue of Surveillance & Society: Issue 8(3)
Guest editors: Torin Monahan, David Murakami Wood, and David J. Phillips
Publication date: end of October 2010
Deadline for submissions: March 31st 2010
This issue of Surveillance & Society is seeking papers and other submissions that examine the social implications of contemporary surveillance with a particular interest in the complexities of empowerment. In the surveillance studies literature, there have been significant contributions unsocial sorting, digital discrimination, privacy invasion, racial profiling, sexual harassment, and other mechanisms of unequal treatment. In contradistinction, this issue seeks to explore the potential of surveillance for individual autonomy and dignity, fairness and due process, community cooperation and empowerment, and social equality. Key to this inquiry will be questioning the extent to which surveillance can be designed, employed, and regulated to contribute to democratic practices and/or the social good.
The very framing of the issue in terms of “surveillance and empowerment†begs the question of empowerment for whom and for what purposes. Thus, we invite critical attention to the ways in which surveillance practices may unfairly embody advantages for some groups over others and to explore alternatives. Possible research areas might include (but are not limited to):
- Surveillance and human security
- Surveillance and well-being / flourishing
- Surveillance for safety
- Ethical surveillance infrastructures and systems, e.g. ubiquitous computing environments that provide care for the vulnerable, dependent and elderly
- Surveillance for sustainability, environmental management and environmental justice Surveillance of energy and resource consumption
- Social networking tools employed by social movements
- Surveillance of corporations, government agencies, or political parties by watchdog groups
- Policies for ensuring privacy,   accountability, and transparency with video or other surveillance systems
- Surveillance in post-authoritarian societies – toward restrictions and counters to the unleashed   surveillance of former regimes
We welcome full academic papers, opinion pieces, review pieces, poetry, artistic, and audio-visual submissions. Submissions will undergo a peer-review and revision process prior to publication. Submissions should be original work, neither previously published nor under consideration for publication elsewhere. All references to previous work by contributors should be masked in the text (e.g., “Author, 2009â€).
All papers must be submitted through the online submission system no later than March 31st 2010, for publication at the end of October 2010.
Please use submit the papers in a MSWord-compatible format. For further submission guidelines, please see:
http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/ojs/index.php/journal/about/submissions#authorGuidelines
For all inquiries regarding the issue, please contact: torin.monahan @ vanderbilt.edu
For other current calls (including Issue 8(2) Surveillance, Consumers and Consumption) and announcements, please see:
http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/ojs/index.php/journal/announcement