[Surveillance-Studies-l] CfP: States of Exception,
Surveillance and Population Management
Eric Toepfer
toepfer at ztg.tu-berlin.de
Mon Mar 3 19:44:57 CET 2008
States of Exception, Surveillance and Population Management:
The Case of Israel/Palestine; due 1 April 2008.
PDF version available here:
http://www.queensu.ca/sociology/Surveillance/files/CFP.pdf
Social science research and legal studies of surveillance in Western
countries have been on the increase in the last couple of decades, in
particular after the terrorist attacks of 9/11. There is, however, a dearth
of comparative, empirical research that includes the Middle East. The
purpose of this call for papers is to examine surveillance practices in
Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories as a conflict zone. The case
study provides an appropriate venue for examining surveillance and its
associated technologies at several levels: (1) social sorting of population
through discursive practices involving people counting and census
construction; (2) spatial control, urban warfare, and territorial
sovereignty; (3) geographic mobility; (4) use of technology in its various
forms to manage people and violence in conflict situations; (5) discourses
of state securitization, biopolitics, and states of exception that are
deployed as means of surveillance; (6) role of the
military-industrial-surveillance complex in promoting surveillance; (7)
extent to which existing privacy and other related laws protect against
intrusiveness by the state, private sector, and third-parties in the
collection and dissemination of personal information; and (8) how the
practice of social sorting in Israel/Palestine has influenced and in turn
been influenced by global considerations related to the discourse on
security and terrorism.
Focus of the Proposed Workshop
The proposed workshop will have three main foci: one, to situate studies of
surveillance and population management in the context of theorizing about
security and states of exception; second, to analyze the assemblages of
surveillance techniques ranging from traditional forms of face-to-face
contact to the use of various types of technologies in the gathering of
personal information; finally, through a political economy perspective, to
analyze state securitisation and the relationship between the
military-industrial complex and the production of surveillance technologies.
While twenty possible topics which address these foci are listed below,
potential participants are encouraged to suggest for possible considerations
other topics that fit within the overall framework of the workshop.
Suggested Topics for a Workshop on Surveillance in Israel/Palestine:
1. Theorizing states of exception and suspension of the law in conflict
zones. Examples should include Israel/Palestine and other regions
2. Use of maps and censuses as surveillance tools in the construction of
citizenship, identities boundaries, and borders
3. The logic of biopolitics in Israel/Palestine as a case study or in
comparison with other regions
4. Colonialism and states of exception in the analysis of population
management and surveillance in British colonial Palestine
5. Face-to-face surveillance (role of informants and collaborators in
pre- and post-1948 Israel/Palestine)
6. Surveillance as a prelude to Palestinian refugee exodus in 1948
7. The checkpoint experience from the points of view of (a) the
Palestinians and (b) Israeli soldiers
8. The passport and the ID as markers of citizenship criteria
9. Urban design, urban warfare and technologies of control
10. The Israeli military-industrial-surveillance complex (a political
economy approach)
11. Israel and other states of exception: surveillance in the
securitisation of the state (role of military, police, and other security
agencies)
12. Surveillance by the private sector (internet service providers, retail
enterprises, commercial databases, etc.)
13. Use of CCTV (as for example in Jerusalem, on Road 6, or other public
places in Israel and the OPT)
14. Profiling of individuals at crossing points
15. The Wall a means of surveillance/security and a tool of land/border
and population management
16. The technological fix to counter surveillance and privacy protection:
A critical assessment
17. Citizen knowledge and awareness of surveillance/privacy laws and their
impact on human rights, freedom of information, etc.
18. The extent to which Israeli policies of social sorting have influenced
and been influenced by other conflict zones
19. Analysis of social sorting and its impact on issues of social justice
and human security
20. Modes of resistance to surveillance techniques
Workshop Sponsors and Venue
The workshop is part of The New Transparency: Surveillance and Social
Sorting project that is funded by the Social Science and Humanities Research
Council of Canada through its Major Collaborative Research Initiative. The
project involves an array of international scholars working in surveillance
studies.
The workshop will be held either at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario
or somewhere in the Middle East, depending on where the majority of
participants are likely to come from. Cost is a consideration here. At this
stage, the workshop is scheduled to be held from 8-9 December 2008 at
Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario.
Those who are interested in submitting a proposal to participate in the
workshop, should send their enquiries and a 500-word abstract to Elia Zureik
, Yasmeen Abu-Laban, or David Lyon by April 1, 2008. Participants are
encouraged to seek funding from their institutions. Some funds may be
available for economy travel and local accommodation for those who can
demonstrate that their institutions or funding councils have turned down
their request for funding.
More information about the Surveillance-studies-l
mailing list