Surveillance and Resilience: Relationships, Dynamics and Consequences

Democracy and Security, 14,3, 2018, pp.238-275

33 Pages Posted: 16 Apr 2019

See all articles by Richard Jones

Richard Jones

University of Edinburgh, School of Law

Charles D. Raab

University of Edinburgh

Ivan Szekely

Eotvos Karoly Policy Institute; OSA Archivum

Date Written: March 26, 2018

Abstract

‘Resilience’ is a contested term with varying and ambiguous meaning in governmental, business and social discourses. Surveillance is increasingly relied upon as an instrument for resilience, enhancing the capability of anticipating, preventing or recovering from adversity, thus preserving the fabric of society and the state. However surveillance itself might undesirably erode social freedoms, rights, and other public goods. In the present study we focus on the interrelationship of surveillance and resilience. Studying the relationships between surveillance and resilience requires not only the theoretical study of possible examples but also the exploration and evaluation of the resilient entity’s core properties, strategies and tactics and the external observer’s stance towards the entity in question. Furthermore, different contexts may exhibit different effects of surveillance on resilience. For example, an increase in surveillance by a democratic state may lead to increasing resilience of the state in the face of terrorist attacks but may also lead to the decreasing resilience of that society’s ability to exercise democratic values. The various models generated by these differing relationships will be explored with relation to three examples: the surveillance of international migration, the surveillance of extremist views, and the surveillance of digital financial transactions.

Keywords: surveillance, resilience, democracy, public goods, security

Suggested Citation

Jones, Richard and Raab, Charles D. and Szekely, Ivan and Szekely, Ivan, Surveillance and Resilience: Relationships, Dynamics and Consequences (March 26, 2018). Democracy and Security, 14,3, 2018, pp.238-275, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3360561

Richard Jones (Contact Author)

University of Edinburgh, School of Law ( email )

Old College
South Bridge
Edinburgh, Scotland EH8 9YL
United Kingdom

HOME PAGE: http://www.law.ed.ac.uk/people/dr-richard-jones

Charles D. Raab

University of Edinburgh ( email )

Edinburgh, EH8 9LL
United Kingdom

Ivan Szekely

Eotvos Karoly Policy Institute ( email )

Szentkiralyi u. 11.
Budapest, H-1088
Hungary

OSA Archivum ( email )

Arany Janos u. 32.
Budapest, H-1051
Hungary
+36 1 327-3250 (Phone)
+36 1 327-3260 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www.osaarchivum.org

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