A critique of surveillance

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This volume brings together nine scholars who, from different regions and Humanities disciplines, put under their crossfire a new dimension of cosmopolitics: the modern complexity of surveillance, control and strategic communication. Contributions range from China to Argentina, Egypt to South Africa, the United States to the new Caliphate. They cut across disciplinary boundaries. They fall into four broad sections: theory of surveillance, strategic communication and globalized control (Salazar, Ornatowski, Ghils), state strategic communication (Liu, Styszynski), military and police intelligence (Doxtader, Vitale), gender and higher education control (Saleh, Glenn).

Author(s): Philippe-Joseph Salazar (ed.), Cezar M. Ornatowski, Paul Ghils, Li Liu, Marcin Styszynski, Erik Doxtader, Maria Alejandra Vitale, Ibrahim Saleh, Ian Glenn
Series: Cosmopolis 2
Publisher: Cosmopolis
Year: 2015

Language: English
Pages: 80
City: Geneva

Surveillance in the electronic age: A rhetorical critique
Philippe-Joseph Salazar

From mindwar to engagement: Strategic communication as geopolitics
Cezar M. Ornatowski

Global knowledge in the global city according
to Paul Otlet’s twin Utopias
Paul Ghils

China’s future and its visual strategic communication
Lu Liu

The Islamic State’s use of Muslim rhetoric for communication
Marcin Styszynski

Harmonizing drones
Erik Doxtader

The rhetoric of surveillance in the archive of the intelligence directorate of the Province of Buenos Aires
Maria Alejandra Vitale

From state security to human security: a case
of archipelago of gender justice in Egypt
Ibrahim Saleh

On your mark...: university grades, privacy, surveillance and control

Ian Glenn