Digital Surveillance in Africa
Power, Agency, and Rights
Tony Roberts editor Admire Mare editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publishing:20th Mar '25
£65.00
This title is due to be published on 20th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
An empirically rich, theoretically sophisticated, policy-oriented analysis of how public and private actors use digital surveillance for social influence and control in eight African countries.
Media coverage and scholarly research on digital surveillance has focused primarily on the USA and Europe. Everyone knows about Cambridge Analytica’s social media surveillance; Edward Snowden’s revelations of the West’s mass internet and phone surveillance; and Pegasus Spyware’s mobile phone surveillance of activists, journalists, judges, and presidents across the world. Comparatively little is known about the millions of dollars now being spent on digital technologies for use in the illegal and illegitimate surveillance of citizens in Africa.
In this open-access third volume of Bloomsbury’s Digital Africa series, a broad range of African and European scholars and practitioners map the development, procurement and (mis)use of the ever-expanding suite of digital surveillance and policing technologies across the continent. Drawing on the empirically rich, theoretically sophisticated research of the African Digital Rights Network, this book examines how public and private actors in Africa use spyware, mobile phone extraction, biometric and face recognition systems, and other technologies for smart-city and other social, and social-control, applications. Eight chapters examine eight African countries, and each of these begins with a thorough political history of the nature of surveillance there under colonial and post-liberation political settlements. This enables new analyses of the socio-cultural, political, and economic drivers and characteristics of contemporary digital surveillance in each country, all of which ultimately leads to concrete policy recommendations at local, national, and international levels.
For its empirical richness and breadth, as well as its theoretical sophistication, Digital Surveillance in Africa is essential reading for anyone interested in contemporary African studies, and it is of keen interest to anyone concerned with how digital surveillance affects everyday lives across the world.
The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com.
From colonial spy-systems to contemporary analyses of the ‘digital state’ and ‘safe-and-smart-cities,’ this book explores surveillance across six African countries. Often reliant on technology from China or Israel, new kinds of dependency emerge, along with fresh modes of resistance. Some salutary conclusions are reached, for those in both global south and global north. * David Lyon, Queen’s University, Canada *
ISBN: 9781350422087
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
240 pages