Ethical Governance of Surveillance Technologies in Times of Crisis: Global Challenges and Divergent Perspectives
A Multi-Session and Online Conference
- Friday 30 October 2020 (9:00 鈥 12:45, CET) &
- Thursday 5 November 2020 (14:30 鈥 17:45, CET)
The Utrecht Centre for Global Challenges will host this interdisciplinary online workshop examining how crises and crisis-narratives interact with the ongoing transformation in the governance of surveillance technologies in different parts of the world. This event is organised by the research platform on Disrupting Technological Innovation? Towards an Ethical and Legal Framework within the Utrecht Centre for Global Challenges.
Conference Theme
The increasing sophistication and globalisation of surveillance technologies has intensified concerns about whether existing governance structures and human rights principles provide adequate protections for individuals. At the same time, the urgent need for effective coordination of responses to global crises has strengthened calls for solutions that rely heavily on surveillance technologies. Faced with these conflicting concerns, many states are increasingly invoking 鈥榚xtraordinary circumstances鈥 to legitimate the heightened surveillance of individuals. But there are profound differences between and within countries in how much weight is given to appeals to crises.
The Covid-19 pandemic provides a particularly compelling illustration of this constellation of issues raised at the intersection of surveillance technology, divergent perspectives, and crisis narratives. Taking the Covid-19 pandemic as a point of departure, the workshop will emphasise a comparative approach to this intersection of issues 鈥 including comparisons with the role of surveillance technologies in other global crises 鈥 with special emphasis on divergent perspectives from across the globe.
One of the defining characteristics of the Covid-19 pandemic has been the heightened awareness of the extent to which one鈥檚 behaviour can have dramatic effects on others. In order to change behaviour and monitor threats, governments around the world are taking a number of 鈥榚mergency鈥 measures within, or even outside, existing legal frameworks. Contact tracing via smartphones is one prominent example of surveillance technology being used either to produce behaviour change, monitor compliance, or both.
Typically, these measures are presented as temporary. Yet it is widely known that some of the governmental responses to previous crises have been normalised and perpetuated. A similar concern arises with governmental responses to the Covid-19 pandemic and other global crises. But the ethical governance of surveillance technology is not merely a matter of protecting the individual actors from government interference with privacy. Private actors also need to be held accountable, and public-private collaboration regarding digital surveillance can be even intensified during times of crisis.
While the Covid-19 pandemic is a global crisis, governments differ in terms of how they intend to track individuals鈥 movement and data. This variance gives rise to a further question of the varied acceptability of digital surveillance among different societies. As the UN Secretary-General鈥檚 High Level Panel on Digital Cooperation acknowledged in its June 2019 report, concepts and expectations of privacy 鈥榙iffer across cultures and societies鈥 (p.18). Different justifications can be readily put forward in balancing individuals鈥 privacy against other interests during times of crisis.
Against this background, the conference will examine various national and regional initiatives taken in response to Covid-19 pandemic in order to collect, store, analyse, and transfer individuals鈥 data. The conference aims at taking a comparative approach, so that we can compare some of the responses to the pandemic to those of previous so-called crises.
Conference Format
The conference will take place online during two sessions: Friday 30 October (9:00 鈥 12:15, Central European Time) and Thursday 5 November 2020 (14:30-17:45, CET). Each interactive session will include presentations, discussions in breakout groups, and plenary panel discussion, integrating input from the breakout sessions.
To encourage participation among students, an introductory session especially tailored to students will be held on October 22nd, 14:00-15:00 CET. During this session some literature will be presented and discussed which will provide useful background knowledge to the topics of the conference.
Programme & confirmed speakers
For a detailed conference programme, .
Day 1: Friday 30 October (9:00 鈥 12:15, Central European Time)
- SESSION ONE:
- Tereza Hendl (LMU M眉nchen) & Tiara Roxanne (DeZIM Institut Berlin) - 鈥淒igital Surveillance in a Pandemic-Response: What Bioethics Needs to Learn from Indigenous Perspectives鈥
- Ivo Emanuilov (KU Leuven) & Katerina Yordanova (KU Leuven) - 鈥淏ack to the Future: Towards Evolutionary Regulation of Post-Crisis Surveillance鈥
- SESSION TWO:
- Pak-Hang Wong (Universit盲t Hamburg) - 鈥淗uman Rights, Human Roles, and the Case of Contact Tracing Apps鈥
- Cansu Canca (AI Ethics Lab) - 鈥淓thics of Contact Tracing: Balancing Privacy, Transparency, and Harm鈥
Day 2: Thursday 5 November (14:30 鈥 17:45, Central European Time)
- KEYNOTE ADDRESS: Karin Loevy (New York 木瓜福利影视)
- SESSION THREE:
- Patrick Taylor Smith (Universiteit Twente) - 鈥淣o States of Exception: A Neo-Republican Theory of Just Emergency Powers鈥
- Jenneke Evers (Universiteit Leiden) & Marjolein Lanzing (Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen) - 鈥淢isconceiving Privacy: A Critical Perspective on Privacy as a Regulatory Governance Tool for Surveillance Technologies During the Covid-19 Crisis鈥
- Niklas Hultin (George Mason 木瓜福利影视, Fairfax Virginia) - 鈥淐oronavirus Surveillance, Human Rights, and Privacy in West Africa鈥
The conference is convened by:
- Joel Anderson
- Machiko Kanetake
- Lucky Belder
- Thijs Ringelberg
- Start date and time
- End date and time
- Registration
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