Accueil / Evénements / Human Agency, Digital Society and Data-Intensive Surveillance

Human Agency, Digital Society and Data-Intensive Surveillance

22 mai 2023 09:00 - 23 mai 2023 17:30
Institut d'études avancées de Paris:
17 quai d'Anjou,
75004, Paris
information@paris-iea.fr
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Colloque coorganisé par Anders Albrechtslund, Professeur en sciences de l'information à l’Université d’Aarhus et directeur du Center for Surveillance Studies, résident-chercheur 2022-2023 à l’IEA de Paris, Rosamunde Van Brakel (Vrije Universiteit Brussel), ainsi que par Olivier Aïm (Sorbonne Université).

Cet événement a reçu le soutien de l'IEA de Paris, du Surveillance Studies Network, et de la VUB Chair in Surveillance Studies.

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Colloque en présentiel. Entrée libre sur inscription via le formulaire en bas de page.

Présentation

La surveillance est omniprésente dans les sociétés contemporaines, sous l’impulsion de la collecte massive de données, des infrastructures interopérables et de l’intelligence artificielle (IA) sous la forme d’innovations numériques telles que la prise de décision algorithmique, les systèmes de reconnaissance faciale automatisés, les dispositifs de suivi et de détection et les technologies de soins de santé avancées.

L’ambition de ce colloque est d’explorer l’interaction entre l’action humaine et la surveillance intensive des données et de caractériser les défis et les opportunités contemporains pour les utilisateurs, les décideurs politiques et le développement technologique à travers les sociétés, les traditions et les langues. S’appuyant sur les recherches diverses et étendues dans le domaine de la surveillance et des sociétés numériques, le colloque a pour objectif de faire converger les résultats des recherches et de favoriser le dialogue entre les disciplines et les secteurs.

Programme

Jour 1: 22 mai 2023

09:00-9:30 Accueil

9:30-9:45: Mot de bienvenue
Anders Albrechtslund (Université d'Aarhus)

9:45-11.00: Keynote
Vita Peacock (King’s College London): The temporalities of privacy activists versus the timelessness of surveillance (chair: Rosamunde van Brakel)

This lecture draws on ongoing research with privacy activists in Germany to explore conceptions of non-monitoring as allowing for growth and change, in contrast to the temporal immobilities that can accompany surveillance infrastructures. The lecture places these sensibilities in relation to memories of authoritarian surveillance, that provide collective knowledge of the possibility of function creep, and thus a persistent impetus for self-definition with regard to acts of monitoring.

11:00-11.30 : Pause café

11:30-13.00
Session 1 (chair: Kirstie Ball)
Stine Ballegaard and Astrid Meyer (Aarhus University): Designing Ethical Infrastructure of Surveillance
Jasmin Dall'Agnola (The George Washington University): Lara Croft. Doing Fieldwork Under Surveillance

13:00-14:00 Déjeuner

14:00-15.30
Session 2 (chair: Jasmin Dall'Agnola)
Renée Ridgway
(Aarhus University): Subjectivities of search or Agencies of anonymity? The black box (Google) versus the black bloc (Tor)
Christian Ulrik Andersen (Aarhus University): Testing the Black Box: Material Aesthetics in Contemporary Art and Digital Culture
Jorge Campos (Leiden University Law School) and Kirstie Ball (University of St Andrews): ‘There’s gotta be some perks in it, otherwise no point in doin’ it at all, is there?’ Exploring the normative dilemmas of data donation

15:30-16:00 Pause café

16:00-17:30
Session 3 (chair: Astrid Meyer)
Lior Volinz
(Vrije Universiteit Brussel): Data-led urbanism: On the perils of participatory surveillance in local governance
Eileen Murphy (Copenhagen Business School): Service Capital: Visibility, Power and Disinterested Securitisation
Lucas Melgaço (Vrije Universiteit Brussel): Participatory Mapping Platforms: Balancing Human Agency, Openness and Oversight in the Reporting of Everyday Urban Issues

Jour 2: 23 mai 2023

09:00-9:30 Café

9:30-10.45 Keynote
Kirstie Ball (University of St Andrews): Connection spaces: Surveilled subjectivity in depth (chair: Anders Albrechtslund)

Thought about the surveilled subject establishes that there is an oppositionality between the body as captured in data and as it is lived. It is argued that where the body’s interior and exterior coincide, a political economy of interiority extracts value from the body in terms of emotions, intentions, volitions, or through the presence of fluids, sounds, or objects.  The latest developments in neurosurveillance, and correspondingly, attentional and cognitive privacy, signal how the deep interior surfaces of the body are now contested within surveillance assemblages. This talk will discuss how the surveilled body is one of multiple surfaces beyond the skin. Starting with Merleau Ponty’s Chiasm, and drawing on empirical research focusing on the workplace, the phenomenon of noticing is framed as a key connection space with surveillance.

10:45-11:15 Pause café

11:15-13:00
Session 4 (chair: Vita Peacock)
Lander Govaerts
(Vrije Universiteit Brussel): Cybernetic policing in late capitalism: Reflections on human agency, police power and subjectivation
Matheus Viegas Ferrari (Université Paris 8 / Universidade Federal da Bahia): Surveillance and prevention Technologies in ‘Paris 2024’: What belongs to the Olympics?
Gavin Smith (Australian National University): The Elephant in the Gaming Room: The Case of Facial Recognition Technology and Gaming Culture in Australia

13:00-14:00 Déjeuner

14:00-15:30
Session 5 (chair: Gavin Smith)
Marc Schuilenburg
(Erasmus University Rotterdam): On psychopower: hypernudges and human agency
Jan Czarnocki (KU Leuven): Containing Predictive Tokens in the EU – Mapping the Laws Against Digital Surveillance
Margot Hanly (Cornell Tech): Brain Business: Human Agency and Autonomy in Commercial Brain-Computer Interfaces

15:30-16:00 Pause café

16:00-17:30
Session 6 (chair: Christian Ulrik Andersen)
Yann Bruna
(Université Paris-Nanterre): Peer surveillance practices through the use of location-based social platforms at teen age
Liisa A. Mäkinen (University of Turku): Giving up when faced with smartphone surveillance – or creating agency through information, knowledge, and action?
A. Soltani (Université Lyon 2): Surveillance, Sousveillance and Counter-surveillance in the Occupied Palestinian Territories: the publication of online content in the context of occupation, between censorship and adaptations

Date dépassée
Le rôle de l'agentivité humaine dans la surveillance numérique
01 septembre 2022 - 30 juin 2023
27845
23 Mai 2023 17:30
Anders Albrechtslund
Oui
29684
Colloques et journées d’étude
Paris