From the Babysitter to Alexa: Surveillance is All Around
Dr. David Lyon is Director of the Surveillance Studies Centre and Professor of Sociology and Law at Queen鈥檚 University. Dr. Lyon is credited with spearheading the field of 鈥渟urveillance studies,鈥 and he has produced a steady stream of books and articles on the subject. His most recent book, The Culture of Surveillance: Watching as a Way of Life, looks at the imaginaries and practices of everyday surveillance. Dr. Lyon is also the Principal Investigator of the 鈥淏ig Data Surveillance鈥 project, funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. This study examines the relationship between big data and surveillance in security, marketing, and governance.
Dr. David Murakami Wood is the Canada Research Chair in Surveillance Studies at Queen鈥檚. He is a widely published specialist in the sociology and geography of surveillance and security in cities from a global comparative perspective, with a particular focus on Japan, Brazil, Canada, and the UK. His current research focuses on security and surveillance in smart cities. Dr. Murakami Wood is also the Editor-in-Chief of the international, open-access, peer-reviewed journal, Surveillance & Society, and a co-investigator of the 鈥淏ig Data Surveillance鈥 project.
Midori Ogasawara is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology. Ogasawara's current doctoral project focuses on the colonial origins and consequences of 鈥渋dentification鈥 technologies, such as ID cards and biometrics, in northeastern China under the Japanese occupation of the 1920s. Ogasawara worked as a staff writer for Asahi Shimbun -- Japan鈥檚 national newspaper, for 10 years. She was awarded the Fulbright Journalist Scholarship and John S. Knight Professional Journalism Fellowships at Stanford University in 2004-2005. In May 2016, she was the first Japanese journalist to interview the NSA whistle blower Edward Snowden, and she published a number of articles.
In this special panel episode, the scholars discuss the changing nature of surveillance studies. Dr. Lyon explains his concept of 鈥渟ocial sorting鈥 as dividing a population into groups so that they can be seen and treated differently. Ogasawara explores the colonial roots of the Japanese biometric ID system, arguing that it was grounded in perceptions of Chinese labour and internal resistance. While Dr. Murakami Wood explains that cities have always been mechanisms for surveillance with current iterations such as smart cities allowing private companies to integrate themselves into government and gain mass data. Together, they discuss the future of the regulation and accountability of mass data collection in an ever-increasing multinational process.
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