[Full paper] Towards a Unified Conceptual Model for Surveillance Theories
The erosion of values such as privacy can be a critical factor in preventing the acceptance of new innovative technology especially in challenging environments such as the criminal justice system. Erosion of privacy happens through either deliberate or inadvertent surveillance. Since Bentham’s original liberal project in the 1900s, a literature and a whole study area around theories of surveillance has developed. Increasingly this general body of work has focussed on the role of information technology as a vehicle for surveillance activity. Despite an abundance of knowledge, a unified view of key surveillance concepts that is useful to designers of information systems in preventing or reducing unintended surveillance remains elusive. This paper contributes a conceptual model that synthesises the gamut of surveillance theories as a first step to a theory building effort for use by Information Systems professionals. The model is evaluated using a design science research paradigm using data from both examples of surveillance and a recently completed research project that developed technology for the UK youth justice system.
Towards a Unified Conceptual Model for Surveillance Theories (4mL8XsAM9N3XHllWNOFWVD.pdf) | 231KiB |
Thu 31 MayDisplayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change
11:00 - 12:30 | Meeting other sciencesSEIS - Software Engineering in Society at R2 Chair(s): Amel Bennaceur The Open University | ||
11:00 20mTalk | [Full paper] SE in ES: Opportunities for Software Engineering and Cloud Computing in Environmental Science SEIS - Software Engineering in Society Will Simm , Faiza Samreen , Richard Bassett , Gordon Blair , Maria Angela Ferrario Lancaster University, Jon Whittle Monash University, Paul Young | ||
11:20 20mTalk | [Full paper] Towards a Unified Conceptual Model for Surveillance Theories SEIS - Software Engineering in Society Pre-print File Attached | ||
11:40 20mTalk | [Full paper] Competence-Confidence Gap: A Threat to Female Developers' Contribution on GitHub SEIS - Software Engineering in Society DOI Pre-print | ||
12:00 20mTalk | [Short paper] Digital Ecclesia: Towards an Online Direct-Democracy Framework SEIS - Software Engineering in Society Dionysis Athanasopoulos Victoria University of Wellington DOI Pre-print | ||
12:20 10mTalk | Q&A in groups SEIS - Software Engineering in Society |