Show
111 citations
related to Surveillance
Show
111 citations
related to Surveillance as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Article
Bruno Oliveira Martins
(2023)
Security knowledges: Circulation, control, and responsible research and innovation in EU border management.
Science as Culture
(pp. 435-459).
(/isis/citation/CBB687707247/)
Article
Nina Amelung; Vasilis Galis
(2023)
Border control technologies: Introduction.
Science as Culture
(pp. 323-343).
(/isis/citation/CBB332203986/)
Article
Silvan Pollozek; Jan-Hendrik Passoth
(2023)
Provisional by design: Frontex data infrastructures and the Europeanization of migration and border control.
Science as Culture
(pp. 411-434).
(/isis/citation/CBB906319443/)
Article
Anna Kvicalova
(2023)
Sound on the Quiet: Speaker Identification and Auditory Objectivity in Czechoslovak Fonoscopy, 1975–90.
Technology and Culture
(pp. 379-406).
(/isis/citation/CBB406403974/)
Article
V. Camille Westmont
(2022)
Social Engineering at the Company Home Hearth: Coal Company Use of Architecture to Control Domestic Spaces in the Pennsylvania Anthracite Region, 1866–1889.
Historical Archaeology
(pp. 782-803).
(/isis/citation/CBB160614733/)
Article
Sarah Myers West
(June 2022)
Cryptography as information control.
Social Studies of Science
(pp. 353-375).
(/isis/citation/CBB869396949/)
Book
Ana Muñiz
(2022)
Borderland Circuitry: Immigration Surveillance in the United States and Beyond.
(/isis/citation/CBB304288480/)
Book
Mary F. E. Ebeling
(2022)
Afterlives of Data: Life and Debt under Capitalist Surveillance.
(/isis/citation/CBB663965321/)
Book
Brian Hochman
(2022)
The Listeners: A History of Wiretapping in the United States.
(/isis/citation/CBB775086796/)
Article
Evan Selinger; Darrin Durant
(2022)
Amazon’s Ring: Surveillance as a Slippery Slope Service.
Science as Culture
(pp. 92-106).
(/isis/citation/CBB181826170/)
Article
Francis Lee
(2022)
Detecting the unknown in a sea of knowns: Health surveillance, knowledge infrastructures, and the quest for classification egress.
Science in Context
(pp. 153-172).
(/isis/citation/CBB635892993/)
Article
Chuncheng Liu
(2022)
Seeing Like a State, Enacting Like an Algorithm: (Re)assembling Contact Tracing and Risk Assessment during the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Science, Technology and Human Values
(pp. 698-725).
(/isis/citation/CBB635816935/)
Chapter
Cierra Robson
(2022)
Broken Mirrors: Surveillance in Oakland as Both Reflection and Refraction of California's Carceral State.
In: Abstractions and Embodiments: New Histories of Computing and Society.
(/isis/citation/CBB422387694/)
Book
Josh Lauer; Kenneth Lipartito
(2021)
Surveillance Capitalism in America.
(/isis/citation/CBB401959068/)
Chapter
Jeremy Milloy
(2021)
Chapter 7. High Priority: Business's War on Drugs and the Expansion of Surveillance in the United States.
In: Surveillance Capitalism in America.
(/isis/citation/CBB834799320/)
Chapter
Zotte, Jennifer Le
(2021)
Chapter 6. Seeing Straight: Policing Sexualities in 1930s Manhattan Nightclubs.
In: Surveillance Capitalism in America.
(/isis/citation/CBB835366389/)
Chapter
Megan Elias
(2021)
Chapter 5. The Watchful Gaze Behind the Welcoming Smile: Surveilling the Guest in American Hotels in the Interwar Period.
In: Surveillance Capitalism in America.
(/isis/citation/CBB262848922/)
Chapter
Meg Leta Jones
(2021)
Chapter 9. Surveillance Capitalism Online: Cookies, Notice and Choice, and Web Privacy.
In: Surveillance Capitalism in America.
(/isis/citation/CBB517617260/)
Chapter
Daniel Robert
(2021-10-01)
Chapter 4. Mystery Shoppers and Self-Monitors: Managing Emotional Labor to Improve the Corporate Image.
In: Surveillance Capitalism in America.
(/isis/citation/CBB000218114/)
Chapter
Dan Guadagnolo
(2021)
Chapter 8. Why Did Uptown Go Down in Flames? Uptown Cigarettes and the Targeted Marketing Crisis.
In: Surveillance Capitalism in America.
(/isis/citation/CBB944990944/)
Be the first to comment!