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All Outputs (3)

The affective atmospheres of surveillance (2013)
Journal Article
Ellis, D., Tucker, I., & Harper, D. (2013). The affective atmospheres of surveillance. Theory and Psychology, 23(6), 716-731. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959354313496604

The spaces that surveillance produces can be thought of as ambiguous, entailing elements that are ethereal yet material, geographical yet trans-geographical. Contemporary surveillance systems form numerous connections that involve multiple times, spa... Read More about The affective atmospheres of surveillance.

The dynamics of impersonal trust and distrust in surveillance systems (2013)
Journal Article
Ellis, D., Harper, D., & Tucker, I. (2013). The dynamics of impersonal trust and distrust in surveillance systems. Sociological Research Online, 18(3), 85-96. https://doi.org/10.5153/sro.3091

Empirical research concerned with the trust that individuals may or may not have in surveillance systems has largely been gauged through opinion poll and survey type research. Although these may be useful in augmenting broad patterns of trust based a... Read More about The dynamics of impersonal trust and distrust in surveillance systems.

Surveillance and subjectivity: Everyday experiences of surveillance practices (2013)
Book Chapter
Ellis, D., Harper, D., & Tucker, I. (2013). Surveillance and subjectivity: Everyday experiences of surveillance practices. In K. Ball, & L. Snider (Eds.), The surveillance-industrial complex: A political economy of surveillance. Routledge

The growth of a surveillance industrial complex over recent decades has had significant implications for the political economy of personal information. Within the field of surveillance studies there has been an engagement with these issues at a macro... Read More about Surveillance and subjectivity: Everyday experiences of surveillance practices.