‘I started seeing shadows everywhere’: the diverse chilling effects of surveillance in Zimbabwe
‘I started seeing shadows everywhere’: the diverse chilling effects of surveillance in Zimbabwe
Recent years have witnessed growing ubiquity and potency of state surveillance measures with heightened implications for human rights and social justice. While impacts of surveillance are routinely framed through ‘privacy’ narratives, emphasising ‘chilling effects’ surfaces a more complex range of harms and rights implications for those who are, or believe they are, subjected to surveillance. Although first emphasised during the McCarthy era, surveillance ‘chilling effects’ remain under-researched, particularly in Africa. Drawing on rare interview data from participants subjected to state-sponsored surveillance in Zimbabwe, the paper reveals complex assemblages of state and non-state actors involved in diverse and expansive hybrid online–offline monitoring. While scholarship has recently emphasised the importance of large-scale digital mass surveillance, the Zimbabwean context reveals complex assemblages of ‘big data’, social media and other digital monitoring combining with more traditional human surveillance practices. Such inseparable online–offline imbrications compound the scale, scope and impact of surveillance and invite analyses as an integrated ensemble. The paper evidences how these surveillance activities exert chilling effects that vary in form, scope and intensity, and implicate rights essential to the development of personal identity and effective functioning of participatory democracy. Moreover, the data reveals impacts beyond the individual to the vicarious and collective. These include gendered dimensions, eroded interpersonal trust and the depleted ability of human rights defenders to organise and particulate in democratic processes. Overall, surveillance chilling effects exert a wide spectrum of outcomes which consequently interfere with enjoyment of multiple rights and hold both short- and long-term implications for democratic participation.
Stevens, Amy
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Fussey, Pete
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Murray, Daragh
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Hove, Kuda
447377a8-6f5e-4816-9f59-0ef2725a9b53
Saki, Otto
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Stevens, Amy
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Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Murray, Daragh
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Hove, Kuda
447377a8-6f5e-4816-9f59-0ef2725a9b53
Saki, Otto
16f09fae-86df-4744-a4db-4656ab03f6a7
Stevens, Amy, Fussey, Pete, Murray, Daragh, Hove, Kuda and Saki, Otto
(2023)
‘I started seeing shadows everywhere’: the diverse chilling effects of surveillance in Zimbabwe.
Big Data & Society, 10 (1).
(doi:10.1177/20539517231158631).
Abstract
Recent years have witnessed growing ubiquity and potency of state surveillance measures with heightened implications for human rights and social justice. While impacts of surveillance are routinely framed through ‘privacy’ narratives, emphasising ‘chilling effects’ surfaces a more complex range of harms and rights implications for those who are, or believe they are, subjected to surveillance. Although first emphasised during the McCarthy era, surveillance ‘chilling effects’ remain under-researched, particularly in Africa. Drawing on rare interview data from participants subjected to state-sponsored surveillance in Zimbabwe, the paper reveals complex assemblages of state and non-state actors involved in diverse and expansive hybrid online–offline monitoring. While scholarship has recently emphasised the importance of large-scale digital mass surveillance, the Zimbabwean context reveals complex assemblages of ‘big data’, social media and other digital monitoring combining with more traditional human surveillance practices. Such inseparable online–offline imbrications compound the scale, scope and impact of surveillance and invite analyses as an integrated ensemble. The paper evidences how these surveillance activities exert chilling effects that vary in form, scope and intensity, and implicate rights essential to the development of personal identity and effective functioning of participatory democracy. Moreover, the data reveals impacts beyond the individual to the vicarious and collective. These include gendered dimensions, eroded interpersonal trust and the depleted ability of human rights defenders to organise and particulate in democratic processes. Overall, surveillance chilling effects exert a wide spectrum of outcomes which consequently interfere with enjoyment of multiple rights and hold both short- and long-term implications for democratic participation.
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stevens-et-al-2023-i-started-seeing-shadows-everywhere-the-diverse-chilling-effects-of-surveillance-in-zimbabwe
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e-pub ahead of print date: 21 March 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 496914
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496914
ISSN: 2053-9517
PURE UUID: b72957d0-2642-443f-8a4e-8778b5f85e52
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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 12:46
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:45
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Author:
Amy Stevens
Author:
Pete Fussey
Author:
Daragh Murray
Author:
Kuda Hove
Author:
Otto Saki
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