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Surveillance as Social Sorting: Privacy, Risk and Automated Discrimination (Paperback) by David Lyon (Author)
Editorial Reviews
Review Like a high quality electromagnet, David Lyon has attracted a group of authors who are producing some the best thinking and writing about privacy and surveillance being published these days... By bringing GIS, Intelligent Transportation Systems and applications of genetic profiling into the same conversation about identity and identification, Lyon has advanced our understanding of the importance of surveillance and social sorting. By including work that examines the nature of contradictions and assesses the evolving character of resistance, Lyon has given us reason to join the struggle. We are, once again, pleased to be in his debt. "Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., Herbert I. Schiller Professor at the University of Pennsylvania and author of The Panoptic Sort
Book Description This book examines some crucial aspects of surveillance processes with a view to showing what constitutes them, why the growth of surveillance is accelerating and what is really at stake personally and politically. It scrutinizes individual surveillance systems - CCTV, biometrics, intelligent transportation systems, smart cards, on-line profiling - and discusses their implications for our future. Surveillance as Social Sorting is a fascinating contribution to a relatively new field - surveillance studies.
Book Info Text offers an innovative approach to the interaction between societies and their technologies. Proposes that surveillance is not simply a contemporary threat to individual freedoms, but also a powerful means of creating and reinforcing long-term social differences. A reference source for a wide variety of courses. Hardcover, softcover available from the publisher.
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