We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Personal Data Collection Risks in a Post-Vaccine World
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
10 January 2023

In the early twenty-first century, the international relations literature still posits realism as a dominant paradigm in the Western School. This volume introduces alternative frames of reference that address the deficiencies of liberalism with its lack of sufficient attention to ethnic diversity. By drawing on constructivism with its focus on framing, particularly the influence in instrumentalist terms of narratives shaped by the media, this volume explores that influence by analysing case studies in historical context. In 2020, the world’s present, yet unequal, experiences of the triptych, personal data, global pandemic and social protests, lead us to introduce personal data (Image I), the mesh region (Image II) and the distributed ecosystem (Image III) to capture the dynamic, transformative nature of the changing relationship between structure and agency.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / General, Society and Social Sciences, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / General, Society and culture: general, Sociology and anthropology
"This groundbreaking volume, which contains a highly original collection of chapters that share coherent structure, themes, and voice, is perfectly suited for an audience of scholars and practitioners working in genocide studies, humanitarianism as well as peace education and may be assigned to graduate level courses on post-conflict reconstruction" — Douglas Irvin-Erickson, Assistant Professor and Director, Genocide Prevention Program, Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution, George Mason University.
Acknowledgements; Foreword by Prof. John Sexton-President Emeritus, New York University Word Clouds by Leslie Elizabeth Prosy, New York University; Introduction by Colette Mazzucelli, James Felton Keith, and Andrea Adams; Part I Chapter 1 Data to the People? Surveillance Capitalism and the Need for a Legal Reconceptualisation of Personal Data beyond the Notion of Privacy Jakub Wojciech Kibitlewski; Chapter 2 Human Subjects, Digital Protocols: The Future of Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) and Digital Research in Vulnerable Communities Charles Martin-Shields and Ziad Al Achkar; Part II Chapter 3 Rome vs. Regions: Government in Italy during COVID-19: Implications for the Future of the European Union (EU) Christian Rossi, Colette Mazzucelli, and David C. Unger; Chapter 4 Roma Lives Matter under the COVID-19 Pandemic: But More So for Populist Nationalism Andras L. Pap; Chapter 5 Ethics of Personal Data Collection in Bosnia– Herzegovina (BiH) Mary Kate Schneider; Part III Chapter 6 Lessons from the Ebola Epidemic in Sierra Leone: The Importance of State, INGO, and Local Network Actors Thynn Thynn Hlaing and Emilie J. Greenhalgh; Chapter 7 The Digital ‘Marketplace of Ideas’: The Need for a Human Rights-Centred, Multi-stakeholder Approach to Cyber Norms Laura Salter; Conclusion by Colette Mazzucelli, Andrea Adams, and Anna Grichting; Afterword by Annette Richardson, Special Advisor, Office of the Executive Director and Under Secretary-General, UN Women; List of Contributors; Index