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ID179567
Title ProperBeyond consent: Surveillance capitalism and politics in the data state
LanguageENG
AuthorKhan, Aasim
Summary / Abstract (Note)The push for digital technologies during the Covid-19 pandemic has put a question mark on the relationship between the state and society in India. In particular, it has highlighted the gap between the lofty promises of digital welfare by political leaders and businesses, and the widespread discontent with digitalization as evident on the ground. In this paper, I take this gap as a starting point to conceptualize the nature of politics in the data state, drawing on Polanyian themes to understand how the contentions are gradually “embedding” the digital economy in society. Tracing the arc of the interactions between domestic ideas, interests and institutions alongside the development of digital capitalism, I also show that caught in these entanglements, digital economy can no longer remain a one-way street for data “extraction”. More specifically, I argue that at the end of its first decade of since the emergence of surveillance capitalism in 2010s, politics has ensured that it confronts ground level resistance that revolves around themes of inclusion, welfare and pluralism rather than the liberal conceptions of privacy and individual consent.
`In' analytical NoteIndia Review Vol. 20, No.2; Mar-Apr 2021: p.158-175
Journal SourceIndia Review Vol: 20 No 2
Key WordsSurveillance Capitalism ;  Politics in the Data State


 
 
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