Beyond ‘nothing to hide’: when identity is key to privacy threat under surveillance
Stuart, A; Levine, M
Date: 25 May 2017
Article
Journal
European Journal of Social Psychology
Publisher
Wiley
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Privacy is psychologically important, vital for democracy, and in the era of ubiquitous and mobile
surveillance technology, facing increasingly complex threats and challenges. Yet surveillance is often
justified under a trope that one has “nothing to hide”. We conducted focus groups (N=42) on topics
of surveillance and privacy, and ...
Privacy is psychologically important, vital for democracy, and in the era of ubiquitous and mobile
surveillance technology, facing increasingly complex threats and challenges. Yet surveillance is often
justified under a trope that one has “nothing to hide”. We conducted focus groups (N=42) on topics
of surveillance and privacy, and using discursive analysis, identify the ideological assumptions and
the positions that people adopt to make sense of their participation in a surveillance society. We find
a premise that surveillance is increasingly inescapable, but this was only objected to when people
reported feeling misrepresented, or where they had an inability to withhold aspects of identities.
The (in)visibility of the surveillance technology also complicated how surveillance is constructed.
Those interested in engaging the public in debates about surveillance may be better served by
highlighting the identity consequences of surveillance, rather than constructing surveillance as a
generalised privacy threat.
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