The transmission and interpretation of information generated from full-body scanners is increasingly becoming a site of contestation in airport security queues all over the world. Body scanning technology raises questions surrounding the rights of governments to images of human bodies, acts of surveillance and to what extent technologies such as full-body scanners are helping to make us more 'secure' - or are disadvantaging particular groups of bodies. We examine the use of full-body scanners and their consequences from a feminist perspective, demonstrating how the scanners constitute both a 'gendered technology' and a 'gendered practice'. In addition we present a typology outlining several forms of feminist resistance that have manifested ...
The relationship between the body and digital technology has long been a lively area of feminist sch...
We live in a surveillance society. Bodies become data. Information is plumbed from the body but trea...
This article presents a feminist argument about the evolution of data storage in relation to the bod...
The transmission and interpretation of information generated from full-body scanners is increasingly...
While the world of commercial air transportation has seen major improvements in many technologies ov...
The use of body scanners for border security purposes allows for their conceptualization as security...
In light of the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, body scanning as an airport securit...
This Note focuses on the intersection of religious freedom and the need for public safety at airport...
This paper examines the problematic of embodied resistance to biometric surveillance practices. Afte...
Changes in security environment after the end of Cold War and 9/11 have strongly affected our securi...
In 2008, debates over the deployment of body scanners in EU airports gave rise to imbroglios of tech...
Feminist Security Studies focuses on expanding the referent object to individuals and non-state coll...
Drawing on anthropology, feminist science and technology studies (STS), and critical masculinity stu...
AbstractMillions of people filter through airport security check points in the United States every y...
No technology emerges in a social or legal vacuum. The laws and norms guiding acceptable uses of new...
The relationship between the body and digital technology has long been a lively area of feminist sch...
We live in a surveillance society. Bodies become data. Information is plumbed from the body but trea...
This article presents a feminist argument about the evolution of data storage in relation to the bod...
The transmission and interpretation of information generated from full-body scanners is increasingly...
While the world of commercial air transportation has seen major improvements in many technologies ov...
The use of body scanners for border security purposes allows for their conceptualization as security...
In light of the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, body scanning as an airport securit...
This Note focuses on the intersection of religious freedom and the need for public safety at airport...
This paper examines the problematic of embodied resistance to biometric surveillance practices. Afte...
Changes in security environment after the end of Cold War and 9/11 have strongly affected our securi...
In 2008, debates over the deployment of body scanners in EU airports gave rise to imbroglios of tech...
Feminist Security Studies focuses on expanding the referent object to individuals and non-state coll...
Drawing on anthropology, feminist science and technology studies (STS), and critical masculinity stu...
AbstractMillions of people filter through airport security check points in the United States every y...
No technology emerges in a social or legal vacuum. The laws and norms guiding acceptable uses of new...
The relationship between the body and digital technology has long been a lively area of feminist sch...
We live in a surveillance society. Bodies become data. Information is plumbed from the body but trea...
This article presents a feminist argument about the evolution of data storage in relation to the bod...