Surveillance as Communicating Relational Messages: Advancing Understandings of the Surveilled Subject

Theoretical understandings of how and why surveilled subjects perceive and react to surveillance have rarely been engaged in the field of surveillance studies. This research introduces relational models of procedural justice as a framework through which the attitudes and behaviours of surveilled sub...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSurveillance & society Vol. 15; no. 2; pp. 286 - 302
Main Author Saulnier, Alana
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Kingston Surveillance Studies Network 01.01.2017
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ISSN1477-7487
1477-7487
DOI10.24908/ss.v15i2.6334

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Summary:Theoretical understandings of how and why surveilled subjects perceive and react to surveillance have rarely been engaged in the field of surveillance studies. This research introduces relational models of procedural justice as a framework through which the attitudes and behaviours of surveilled subjects can be more consistently understood in particular (but not singular) surveillance contexts. Qualitative analysis of encounters with surveillance at Pearson International Airport (Toronto, Canada) demonstrates that participants were attentive to relational concerns during these encounters. The findings are positioned in relation to the procedural justice literature to demonstrate the importance of the process of surveillance alongside, or even apart from, its outcomes in terms of understanding and explaining surveilled subjects’ experiences and formation of subjectivities at airports and perhaps more generally.
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ISSN:1477-7487
1477-7487
DOI:10.24908/ss.v15i2.6334