The chapter outlines how the development of population censuses and their alternatives such as population registers and government administrative databases can be understood as different forms of surveillance by numbers. That is, it investigates how the gaze of these devices is fixed on surveilling whole populations and governing by numbers. Rather than being more or less surveillant or constituting better and cheaper ‘information’ about populations it argues that different numbering devices find, see and count different populations and have different governing consequences. It is these differences that the chapter explores
In the digital era, we open spread sheets generated by software architecture, and populate the empty...
A census is an example of the social construction of knowledge and the politics of measurement. Meas...
Censuses (1) suggests that all countries collect information on a common set of characteristics, in ...
Identification practices such as population and address registers, identity cards, biometric visas a...
Changes in technology, society and individual behaviours are having impressive effects on data produ...
This chapter of Beginning Population Studies (3rd edition) discusses sources of data for population ...
The census is a count of total population and total households across an entire nation. It is taken ...
Since their origins in seventeenth-century Sweden, population registers have been kept at local leve...
Censuses and surveys shape decisions, discourse and debates about people and their lived environment...
Censuses and surveys shape decisions, discourse and debates about people and their lived environment...
While Foucault described population as the object of biopower he did not investigate the practices t...
Provisional edition published in 1949 under title: Population census handbook.[United Nations. Docum...
Since their origins in seventeenth-century Sweden, population registers have been kept at local leve...
This paper develops a theoretical approach for understanding how the census has not only played a ro...
While the census is sometimes understood to be an objectifying practice that constructs and makes up...
In the digital era, we open spread sheets generated by software architecture, and populate the empty...
A census is an example of the social construction of knowledge and the politics of measurement. Meas...
Censuses (1) suggests that all countries collect information on a common set of characteristics, in ...
Identification practices such as population and address registers, identity cards, biometric visas a...
Changes in technology, society and individual behaviours are having impressive effects on data produ...
This chapter of Beginning Population Studies (3rd edition) discusses sources of data for population ...
The census is a count of total population and total households across an entire nation. It is taken ...
Since their origins in seventeenth-century Sweden, population registers have been kept at local leve...
Censuses and surveys shape decisions, discourse and debates about people and their lived environment...
Censuses and surveys shape decisions, discourse and debates about people and their lived environment...
While Foucault described population as the object of biopower he did not investigate the practices t...
Provisional edition published in 1949 under title: Population census handbook.[United Nations. Docum...
Since their origins in seventeenth-century Sweden, population registers have been kept at local leve...
This paper develops a theoretical approach for understanding how the census has not only played a ro...
While the census is sometimes understood to be an objectifying practice that constructs and makes up...
In the digital era, we open spread sheets generated by software architecture, and populate the empty...
A census is an example of the social construction of knowledge and the politics of measurement. Meas...
Censuses (1) suggests that all countries collect information on a common set of characteristics, in ...