People’s Practices in the Face of Data Power
The shift towards big data-driven decision-making and algorithmic automation across many aspects of everyday life remains a contentious subject of debate and critique. Critical social scientists and media scholars assert that this shift alters the nexus and power relations between state, citizens, a...
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Published in | Dialogues in Data Power pp. 80 - 102 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
Bristol, UK
Bristol University Press
03.09.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISBN | 9781529238303 1529238307 |
DOI | 10.51952/9781529238327.ch004 |
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Summary: | The shift towards big data-driven decision-making and algorithmic automation across many aspects of everyday life remains a contentious subject of debate and critique. Critical social scientists and media scholars assert that this shift alters the nexus and power relations between state, citizens, and industry. Individuals and communities have little control over how their data are collected and have little to no influence on the algorithmically informed decisions that govern their lives. This chapter addresses power asymmetries that are emerging at this contemporary juncture. The chapter points to possibilities to agency in the data practices, including consent practices, refusal practices, citizen participation (including citizen juries and citizen assemblies), as well as other forms of data activism. In doing so, we aim to contribute to reshaping data power from the bottom up and propose people-centred and radically contextualized approaches to imagining alternative data futures. |
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Bibliography: | Global Social Challenge: Technology, Data and Society |
ISBN: | 9781529238303 1529238307 |
DOI: | 10.51952/9781529238327.ch004 |