Framing the Pandemic and the Rise of the Digital Surveillance State Cover Image

Framing the Pandemic and the Rise of the Digital Surveillance State
Framing the Pandemic and the Rise of the Digital Surveillance State

Author(s): Ahmed Maati, Žilvinas Švedkauskas
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences
Published by: Ústav mezinárodních vztahů
Keywords: digital;surveillance;privacy;human rights;framing;regime types;democratic backsliding;

Summary/Abstract: The pandemic caused by the SARS-COV-2 virus has provided a pretext for many countries of the world to extend executive powers, and their digital surveillance capacities in particular. Aiming to identify how different regimes frame digital surveillance, this paper employs qualitative content analysis to compare the government framing of digital surveillance in India, Israel and Singapore. Although due to their different working dynamics, one would expect democracies and autocracies to frame digital surveillance in different ways, our findings reveal an overlap between liberal and illiberal rhetoric across the cases and point to unexplored illiberal peculiarities within the category of ‘democratic backsliders.’ We conclude by cautiously speculating how heightened extents of digital surveillance and tracking may become the new normal across regime types, and how governments might exploit and recycle these same frames to justify digital surveillance after the COVID-19 crisis is over.

  • Issue Year: 55/2020
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 48-71
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English
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