Resisting Crisis Surveillance Capitalism in Academic Libraries

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33137/cjalrcbu.v7.36450

Keywords:

academic integrity, COVID-19, privacy, student success, surveillance

Abstract

In this paper, we consider what we identify as crisis surveillance capitalism in higher education, drawing on the work of Naomi Klein and Shoshana Zuboff. We define crisis surveillance capitalism as the intersection of unregulated and ubiquitous data collection with the continued marginalization of vulnerable racial and social groups. Through this lens, we examine the twinned crisis narratives of student success and academic integrity and consider how the COVID-19 pandemic further enabled so-called solutions that collect massive amounts of student data with impunity. We suggest a framework of refusal to crisis surveillance capitalism coming from the work of Keller Easterling and Baharak Yousefi, identifying ways to resist and build power in a context where the cause of harm is all around and intentionally hidden.

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Author Biographies

Callan Bignoli, Olin College of Engineering

Callan Bignoli is the Director of the Library at Olin College of Engineering in Needham, Massachusetts. She studies and speaks about user experience design, library management, and the social impacts of technology. Callan joined the Library Freedom Project in 2020.

Sam Buechler, Washington State University Vancouver

Sam Buechler is the Student Success Library Faculty Resident at Washington State University Vancouver. Their research interests include privacy and surveillance on college campuses, academic library outreach, and critical information literacy. They have been a member of the Library Freedom Project since 2020. (Contact: sam.buechler@wsu.edu)

Deborah Yun Caldwell, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Deborah Yun Caldwell was the 2018-2021 Diversity Resident Librarian at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She serves on the steering committee for the PEGI Project, advocating to ensure access to public government information. Her work explores the intersections of digital preservation, information stewardship, cultural memory, and the justice of information access. She has been a member of the Library Freedom Project since 2020.

Kelly McElroy, Oregon State University

Kelly McElroy is an Associate Professor and outreach librarian at Oregon State University. She has been a member of the Library Freedom Project since 2018.

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Published

2021-12-15

How to Cite

Bignoli, Callan, Sam Buechler, Deborah Caldwell, and Kelly McElroy. 2021. “Resisting Crisis Surveillance Capitalism in Academic Libraries”. Canadian Journal of Academic Librarianship 7 (December):1-25. https://doi.org/10.33137/cjalrcbu.v7.36450.

Issue

Section

Special Focus on Refusing Crisis Narratives

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