<p>`<b>This book is important reading for anyone who is interested in online surveillance, privacy, the digitalized bureaucracy and social control since her conceptualization of digitization and surveillance can be applied to general application of social surveillance and securitization.</b>’ — <i>Deborah Komarnisky</i>, <i>Ph.D. Student, Department of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada</i>; <i>AmeriQuests</i> 15.1 (2020)</p>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Veronika Nagy, PhD, is an assistant professor of criminology at the Willem Pompe Institute at the Faculty of Law Governance and Economics, Utrecht University. Her research interest includes surveillance, digital inequality with a focus on a broad connection between mobility and technology, securitisation of international migration, criminalisation and digital self-censorship. She conducted research on specific forms of ethnic mobility, human trafficking and digital profiling (exploitation of workers, forced criminal activities and trafficking of children).