Outline
The Everyday Life of Surveillance
ESRC
/ Surveillance Studies Network Seminar Series
The new ESRC / Surveillance Studies
Network Seminar Series, The Everyday
Life of Surveillance, will consist of six intensive transdisciplinary
seminars, backed with weblogs and online discussion, to take place from
April 2008 until June 2009. The preliminary
programme details can be found here.
Surveillance Studies is gaining increasing recognition. However, researchers,
campaigners and the government are still too impressed with new technologies
and new methods of surveillance, or the extension of surveillance to
new areas. There remains little in-depth research on the experience
of being under surveillance and the psychological, social and ethical
implications of living in a society of increasingly pervasive surveillance.
There need to be more linkages made with concepts such as securitization
and risk. We argue that what is important about surveillance is not
simply the fact that surveillance is increasingly everywhere but that
surveillance is an essential critical concept in understanding contemporary
society.
This seminar series aims to move beyond both alarmist talk of ‘Big
Brother’ and the cynical acceptance of increasing surveillance
as inevitable. It aims discuss what living in a society in which surveillance
is normal means for individuals, our workplaces, homes and cities, and
society as a whole, and what can be done about it. Further it aims to
extend the scope of surveillance studies itself to consideration of
surveillance in new areas, for example in relation to time, the future
and memory, and to animals, plants and ecosystems. It will build on
previous work funded by the ESRC (for example, through the e-Society
programme), develop new understandings that will aid the increasing
public discussion of surveillance, develop useful new research, and
establish the core of a new generation of surveillance studies scholars.
We will do this with a highly directed series of seminars. Rather than
simply allowing invited speakers to talk simply about subjects with
which they feel comfortable, and to say the same things that are usually
said, each seminar will be based on provocative position statements
from the organising team. These will be produced several weeks in advance
of each seminar and published on the interactive seminar series weblog.
Speakers will be asked to address the positions statement as a starting
point to produce a genuine debate rather than a talking shop. Their
responses will also be made available for discussion on the blog.
To encourage early-career researchers, the core seminar group will
be made up of the organisers and five or six competitively-selected
academics in the early stages of their career. These researchers
will be funded to come to all the seminars in order to broaden and deepen
their thinking and enable them to develop new research. Other non-funded
places will be available with priority given to further talented early-career
researchers.