name : 이종민
주소는
www.surveillance-and-society.org
입니다.
지금까지 세번이 나왔구요.
앞으로 나올 호의 특집도 소개가 되어 있군요.
Volume 1 Theme Publication Date
Issue 1 Launch Issue September 2002
Issue 2 Work January 2003
Issue 3 Foucault and Panopticism Revisited July 2003
Issue 4 Mobilities *November 2003
Volume 2 Theme Publication Date
Issue 1 Open Issue *January 2004
Issue 2 CCTV and Social Control * April 2004
Issue 3 *People Watching People * July 2004
Issue 4 *Conflict *October 2004
*provisional
There is no charge or membership requirements however all written articles will only be available in PDF format to protect the copyright of the authors. Other forms of submission may be published in various formats as required.
If you would like to submit an article, click here.
지금까지 나온 세번의 저널의 목차도 올리지요.
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Editorial
David Lyon Surveillance Studies: understanding visibility, mobility and the phenetic fix.
Articles
Gary T. Marx What’s New About the “New Surveillance”? Classifying for change and continuity.
Nic Groombridge Crime Control or Crime Culture TV?
Rodney Fopp Increasing the Potential for Gaze, Surveillance and Normalisation: the transformation of an Australian policy for people who are homeless.
Nick Taylor State Surveillance and the Right to Privacy.
Technical Review
Jason Ditton Hair Testing: just how accurate is it?
Interview
Erich W. Schienke and IAA
On the Outside Looking Out: an interview with the Institute for Applied Autonomy (IAA).
Opinion
Felix Stalder Privacy is Not the Antidote to Surveillance.
Abstracts
<<‘Work’ >>
Editorial
Kirstie Ball The Labours of Surveillance
Articles
Paul Thompson Fantasy Island: a Labour Process critique of the ‘age of surveillance’
Jeffrey M. Stanton & Kathryn R. Stam Information Technology, Privacy, and Power within Organizations: a view from Boundary Theory and Social Exchange perspectives
Benjamin J. Goold Public Area Surveillance and Police Work: the impact of CCTV on police behaviour and autonomy
Case-Study
Peter Holland Drug Testing in the Australian Mining Industry
Opinion
Lucas D. Introna
Workplace Surveillance ‘is’ Unethical and Unfair
A.J. Charlesworth Privacy, Personal Information and Employment
Michele Beck Working for Them
Rosalind H. Searle Organizational Justice in E-recruiting: Issues and controversies
Poem
Özgür Özmen Uysal ‘Cageling’
Abstracts
<<‘Foucault and Panopticism Revisited’>>
Abstracts
Editorial
David Wood Foucault and Panopticism Revisited.
Revisiting Foucault
Stuart Elden Plague, Panopticon, Police.
Majid Yar Panoptic Power and the Pathologisation of Vision: Critical Reflections on the Foucauldian Thesis.
Paulo Vaz and Fernanda Bruno Types of Self-Surveillance: from abnormality to individuals ‘at risk’.
The Urban Panopticon
Hille Koskela ‘Cam Era’ — the contemporary urban Panopticon.
Mitchell Gray Urban Surveillance and Panopticism: will we recognize the facial recognition society?
Resistance / Subversion
Steve Mann, Jason Nolan and Barry Wellman Sousveillance: Inventing and Using Wearable Computing Devices for Data Collection in Surveillance Environments.
Erich W. Schienke and Bill Brown Streets into Stages: an interview with Surveillance Camera Players’ Bill Brown.
extra! Movie of SCP Tour with Bill Brown
(MP4 format, 41Mb (!), 15 minutes)
Steve Mann, James Fung, Mark Federman and Gianluca Baccanico PanopDecon: deconstructing, decontaminating, and decontextualizing panopticism in the postcyborg era.
After Panopticism
Sean P. Hier Probing the Surveillant Assemblage: on the dialectics of surveillance practices as processes of social control.
Michalis Lianos Social Control after Foucault. (English)
Le Contrôle Social après Foucault. (Français)
2004년 1월에 컨퍼런스도 있네요.
CCTV and Social Control
The politics and practice of videosurveillance: European and Global perspectives
A two day conference to be held at the Centre For Criminological Research, University of Sheffield in conjucntion with Surveillance & Society.
January 8th – 9th 2004
Background | Publication | 2nd Call for Papers | Fees | Further Info
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Background
Although the UK has clearly the most developed public infrastructure of surveillance cameras in the world, in the wake of September 11th other countries are increasingly deploying cameras in a range of settings, including city centre streets, sporting venues, transport systems, schools, hospitals, to name but a few.
The aim of this conference is to explore the extent and diversity of CCTV deployment in different countries and institutional settings and to consider the social, political and legal issues that arise from the expansion of surveillance. Although the conference will have a particular European focus we would especially welcome contributions from researchers in North and South America, Australia, Africa and Asia. The conference aims to be truly inter-disciplinary and welcomes contributions from sociologists, anthropologists, geographers, criminologists, socio-legal scholars, historians, economists and social scientists researching video-surveillance.
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Special Issue of Surveillance & Society
It is planned that all papers given at theconference will be considered for publication in a special edition of Surveillance and Society. However, acceptance of a paper for the conference is not a guarantee of publication as all submissions will be subject to normal peer review procedures. The special edition will be jointly edited by Professor Clive Norris (University of Sheffield), Dr Mike McCahill (University of Hull) and Dr David Wood (University of Newcastle).
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2nd Call for Papers
Following the 1st Call for Papers, there is still room for a few more presentations. We particularly welcome papers on the following topics:
Theorising CCTV surveillance
National trends in the growth of video-surveillance – national/international perspectives
Case studies of the impact of CCTV surveillance in different institutional settings/countries
The effectiveness of CCTV as a crime prevention measure
Video surveillance and social exclusion
CCTV and the media
CCTV and legal regulation
The history of video surveillance
The politics of resistance
The contours of public acceptability of CCTV
The new technologies of video surveillance
CCTV and Civil liberties.
Ethical issues in CCTV surveillance
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Fees
The Conference Fee will be £110 (?165) for the two days and £60 (?90) for one day attendance. The fee will include refreshments and lunch, but not overnight accommodation and evening meals.
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Further Information
A conference web page is now up and running:
http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/ccr/publicity/conference/index.html
2003-09-24