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David Lyon

Researcher at Queen's University

Publications -  107
Citations -  8500

David Lyon is an academic researcher from Queen's University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sorting & Politics. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 102 publications receiving 8090 citations. Previous affiliations of David Lyon include Panasonic & Queen's University Faculty of Law.

Papers
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Book

Surveillance Society: Monitoring Everyday Life

David Lyon
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the spread of surveillance in the city, body parts and probes, invisible frameworks, and leaky containers in the world, and the future of surveillance.
Book

Electronic Eye: The Rise of Surveillance Society

David Lyon
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a survey of surveillance in modern society, focusing on body, soul, and credit card, and discuss counter-surveillance, privacy, power, and persons.
Book

Surveillance Studies: An Overview

David Lyon
TL;DR: The Watched World Today as discussed by the authors is a collection of articles about the surveillance of people in the world, including the following: 1. The Watched world today; 2. Spreading Surveillance Sites; 3. Explaining Surveillance; 4. Information, Identification, Inventory; 5. Security, Suspicion, Social Sorting; 6. Bodies, Borders, Biometrics; 7. Visibility; 8. Struggles over Surveillance; 9. Data, Discrimination, Dignity; 10.
Book

Surveillance as social sorting : privacy, risk, and digital discrimination

David Lyon
TL;DR: The case of the workplace is discussed in this article, where the authors discuss privacy and the Phenetic Urge of local practice in the context of surveillance in the information age, from personal to digital: CCTV, the Panopticon and the Technological Meditation of Suspicion and Social Control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surveillance, Snowden, and Big Data: Capacities, consequences, critique

TL;DR: Big Data intensifies certain surveillance trends associated with information technology and networks, and is thus implicated in fresh but fluid configurations, and the ethical turn becomes more urgent as a mode of critique.