Description
Pandemic Surveillance frames and defines digital privacy and security in the context of emerging surveillance technologies, providing informed dialogue on international conversations regarding pandemic surveillance. The book examines the challenges of regulating pandemic surveillance technologies across diverse geographical settings, including Europe and Latin America, along with comparative analysis of social credit systems in China and the United States. Margaret Hu and her impressive selection of contributors explore the legal, scientific and ethical challenges in a world with a growing data surveillance architecture, providing policy recommendations and forward-looking solutions, including the importance of ethical frameworks, to minimise potential misuse and abuse of surveillance technologies.
Delivering a well-rounded examination of pandemic surveillance and data-tracking technologies, this book is a crucial read for researchers and scholars focused on information security and data privacy, including specialists in the area of cyber ethics and data ethics. Students and academics interested in health policy and bioethics will also benefit from the insights in this text.
About the Author
Edited by Margaret Hu, Professor of Law, William & Mary Law School, College of William & Mary, US
Reviews
'Ruptures can help us see society in new ways. By interrogating the surveillance practices during the COVID-19 pandemic from different angles, the essays in this book insightfully reveal a range of challenges to privacy in a data-saturated world.' -- danah boyd, author of It's Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens
Book Information
ISBN 9781800889408
Author Margaret Hu
Format Hardback
Page Count 246
Imprint Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Publisher Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd