RMIT University
Browse

Monitory politics, digital surveillance and new protest movements

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 22:00 authored by John PostillJohn Postill, Victor Lasa Briz, Ge Zhang
In this article we seek to inject some dynamism and complexity into the current scholarship on digital surveillance. Drawing from ethnographic research in Hong Kong, we argue that digital surveillance is a multi-directional endeavour with top-down, bottom-up and horizontal dimensions. Therefore it cannot be reduced to desktop-down portrayals of an almighty ‘surveillance state’ – not even in advanced surveillance regimes like China’s. Instead we suggest that digital surveillance practices must be set within a much larger, dynamic system we describe as monitory politics, a type of political action in which state and non-state actors surveil and shape one another’s activities across a rapidly changing communicative landscape. To develop this idea, we first provide a brief methodological section based on our participant observation during the 2014 protests in Hong Kong, also known as the Umbrella Movement, after which we review the existing literature on China’s surveillance efforts. We then sketch an account of the protests, followed by a discus-sion of the uncannily similar horizontal (or lateral) surveillance practices of local people and the police. We conclude that China’s ‘networked authoritarianism’ (MacKinnon 2011, 2012) is far from being a perfect model of control, for numerous forms of dissent and resistance survive in the country, with the Hong Kong protests as a case in point.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.5771/9783845295008-453
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 00386073

Journal

Soziale Welt

Volume

23

Start page

453

End page

466

Total pages

14

Publisher

Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH und Co. KG

Place published

Germany

Language

English

Copyright

© Open access creative commons

Former Identifier

2006118838

Esploro creation date

2023-01-12

Usage metrics

    Scholarly Works

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC