Protests in the Information Age
Social Movements, Digital Practices and Surveillance
Herausgeber: Melgaço, Lucas; Monaghan, Jeffrey
Protests in the Information Age
Social Movements, Digital Practices and Surveillance
Herausgeber: Melgaço, Lucas; Monaghan, Jeffrey
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This book explores the relationships between communication and information technologies and social movements by drawing on different international case studies. It poses questions about the future of protests, surveillance and digital landscapes.
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This book explores the relationships between communication and information technologies and social movements by drawing on different international case studies. It poses questions about the future of protests, surveillance and digital landscapes.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 192
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 277g
- ISBN-13: 9780367482213
- ISBN-10: 0367482215
- Artikelnr.: 60005008
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 192
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 277g
- ISBN-13: 9780367482213
- ISBN-10: 0367482215
- Artikelnr.: 60005008
Lucas Melgaço is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Criminology of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Belgium where he combines his background in geography with his specialization in surveillance, security and policing studies. He holds a doctorate degree in Geography from a partnership between the University of São Paulo (USP) and the University of Paris 1 ¿ Panthéon Sorbonne. He has also worked on translating and introducing the theories of Brazilian geographer Milton Santos to the English-speaking community. Lucas is co-editor of the book Order and Conflict in Public Space (Routledge, 2016) and lead editor of the journal Criminological Encounters. Jeffrey Monaghan is an Assistant Professor at Carleton¿s Institute for Criminology and Criminal Justice, Canada. He has a PhD in Sociology from Queen's University, where he studied at the Surveillance Studies Centre. His research is focused on the surveillance of social movements with a focus on environmental and indigenous movements; knowledge construction practices associated with contemporary policing of `radicalization¿; and domestic security governance in the context of the `war on terror'. His recent book, Security Aid (University of Toronto Press, 2017), examines the securitization of humanitarian aid. He lives in Ottawa, Canada.
Introduction: Taking to the Streets in the Information Age
Lucas Melgaço and Jeffrey Monaghan
Part I: Digital Practices as Part of Social Movement Repertoires of Contention. 1. Mobilisation and Surveillance on Social Media: The Ambivalent Case of the Anti-Austerity Protests in Spain (2011-2014)
Manuel Maroto and Alejandro Segura
2. #Rahmrepnow: Social Media and the Campaign to Win Reparations for Chicago Police Torture Survivors
2013-2015
Andrew S. Baer
3. Cracks and Reformations in the Brazilian Mediascape: Mídia Ninja
Radical Citizen Journalism
and Resistance in Rio De Janeiro
Tucker Landesman and Stuart Davis
4. Applying Privacy-Enhancing Technologies: One Alternative Future of Protests
Daniel Bosk
Guillermo Rodriguez-Cano
Benjamin Greschbach and Sonja Buchegger
Part II: Control Practices of Policing and Security Agencies. 5. Settler Colonial Surveillance and the Criminalization of Social Media: Contradictory Implications for Palestinian Resistance
Madalena Santos
6. Between Visibility and Surveillance. Challenges to Anti-Corporate Activism in Social Media
Julie Uldam
7. The Impact of Video Tracking Routines on Crowd Behaviour and Crowd Policing
Marco Krüger
8. Surveillance-Ready-Subjects: The Making of Canadian Anti-Masking Law
Debra Mackinnon
Lucas Melgaço and Jeffrey Monaghan
Part I: Digital Practices as Part of Social Movement Repertoires of Contention. 1. Mobilisation and Surveillance on Social Media: The Ambivalent Case of the Anti-Austerity Protests in Spain (2011-2014)
Manuel Maroto and Alejandro Segura
2. #Rahmrepnow: Social Media and the Campaign to Win Reparations for Chicago Police Torture Survivors
2013-2015
Andrew S. Baer
3. Cracks and Reformations in the Brazilian Mediascape: Mídia Ninja
Radical Citizen Journalism
and Resistance in Rio De Janeiro
Tucker Landesman and Stuart Davis
4. Applying Privacy-Enhancing Technologies: One Alternative Future of Protests
Daniel Bosk
Guillermo Rodriguez-Cano
Benjamin Greschbach and Sonja Buchegger
Part II: Control Practices of Policing and Security Agencies. 5. Settler Colonial Surveillance and the Criminalization of Social Media: Contradictory Implications for Palestinian Resistance
Madalena Santos
6. Between Visibility and Surveillance. Challenges to Anti-Corporate Activism in Social Media
Julie Uldam
7. The Impact of Video Tracking Routines on Crowd Behaviour and Crowd Policing
Marco Krüger
8. Surveillance-Ready-Subjects: The Making of Canadian Anti-Masking Law
Debra Mackinnon
Introduction: Taking to the Streets in the Information Age
Lucas Melgaço and Jeffrey Monaghan
Part I: Digital Practices as Part of Social Movement Repertoires of Contention. 1. Mobilisation and Surveillance on Social Media: The Ambivalent Case of the Anti-Austerity Protests in Spain (2011-2014)
Manuel Maroto and Alejandro Segura
2. #Rahmrepnow: Social Media and the Campaign to Win Reparations for Chicago Police Torture Survivors
2013-2015
Andrew S. Baer
3. Cracks and Reformations in the Brazilian Mediascape: Mídia Ninja
Radical Citizen Journalism
and Resistance in Rio De Janeiro
Tucker Landesman and Stuart Davis
4. Applying Privacy-Enhancing Technologies: One Alternative Future of Protests
Daniel Bosk
Guillermo Rodriguez-Cano
Benjamin Greschbach and Sonja Buchegger
Part II: Control Practices of Policing and Security Agencies. 5. Settler Colonial Surveillance and the Criminalization of Social Media: Contradictory Implications for Palestinian Resistance
Madalena Santos
6. Between Visibility and Surveillance. Challenges to Anti-Corporate Activism in Social Media
Julie Uldam
7. The Impact of Video Tracking Routines on Crowd Behaviour and Crowd Policing
Marco Krüger
8. Surveillance-Ready-Subjects: The Making of Canadian Anti-Masking Law
Debra Mackinnon
Lucas Melgaço and Jeffrey Monaghan
Part I: Digital Practices as Part of Social Movement Repertoires of Contention. 1. Mobilisation and Surveillance on Social Media: The Ambivalent Case of the Anti-Austerity Protests in Spain (2011-2014)
Manuel Maroto and Alejandro Segura
2. #Rahmrepnow: Social Media and the Campaign to Win Reparations for Chicago Police Torture Survivors
2013-2015
Andrew S. Baer
3. Cracks and Reformations in the Brazilian Mediascape: Mídia Ninja
Radical Citizen Journalism
and Resistance in Rio De Janeiro
Tucker Landesman and Stuart Davis
4. Applying Privacy-Enhancing Technologies: One Alternative Future of Protests
Daniel Bosk
Guillermo Rodriguez-Cano
Benjamin Greschbach and Sonja Buchegger
Part II: Control Practices of Policing and Security Agencies. 5. Settler Colonial Surveillance and the Criminalization of Social Media: Contradictory Implications for Palestinian Resistance
Madalena Santos
6. Between Visibility and Surveillance. Challenges to Anti-Corporate Activism in Social Media
Julie Uldam
7. The Impact of Video Tracking Routines on Crowd Behaviour and Crowd Policing
Marco Krüger
8. Surveillance-Ready-Subjects: The Making of Canadian Anti-Masking Law
Debra Mackinnon