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      Chapter

      A neo-republican critique of transparency
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      Chapter

      A neo-republican critique of transparency

      DOI link for A neo-republican critique of transparency

      A neo-republican critique of transparency book

      The chilling effects of publicizing power

      A neo-republican critique of transparency

      DOI link for A neo-republican critique of transparency

      A neo-republican critique of transparency book

      The chilling effects of publicizing power
      ByMatthew Hall
      BookTrust and Transparency in an Age of Surveillance

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      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2021
      Imprint Routledge
      Pages 18
      eBook ISBN 9781003120827
      OA Funder Jagiellonian University in Krakow
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      ABSTRACT

      Advocates of transparency seem to insist that so long as the regimes that surveil us are open about how they are surveilling us, the “wrong” of mass state surveillance is resolved. Once the rules are clear and effectively enforced, the breach of trust, evident following the Snowden revelations, is mended. However, viewing the wrong of mass state surveillance instead through the harm it causes to our freedom as nondomination reveals something else entirely. From this perspective, it becomes clear that rendering state surveillance power more transparent to citizens simply serves to publicize practices of surveillance, making certain groups and individuals who are exposed to surveillance more acutely aware of the power held over them, ironically amplifying surveillance’s chilling effects. Consequently, opportunities to contest the harms produced by surveillance, not merely information about the rules that govern surveillance, are required.

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