18/09/2019 19/09/2019
17:00 19:00
This workshop will discuss the different publications of the program UTIC (2014-2019) on the communications surveillance practices of police and intelligence services, in particular in France but also at the European and transatlantic levels.… Lire la suite

State Surveillance and Democracy in the Digital Era: A Transnational Perspective

 

This workshop will discuss the different publications of the program UTIC (2014-2019) on the communications surveillance practices of police and intelligence services, in particular in France but also at the European and transatlantic levels. The conversation will also include the new ORA program GUARDINT (2019-2022) on the fragile limits of democracies and the question of the oversight of intelligence services, especially when they are cooperating Internationally.

The workshop will be in English.

The following journal issues and books will be presented and discussed via different round tables:

      

Les mondes du renseignement, Cultures et Conflits  éditions Harmattan (forthcoming September 2019) https://www.editions-harmattan.fr/index.asp?navig=catalogue&obj=revue&no=13

 

DAY 1 | September 18th 2019 

17:00 to 17:15 : Opening remarks by Alain Dieckhoff
Engin Isin ,
Queen Mary University of London (QMUL) and Didier Bigo, Sciences Po: Data, Politics, Democracy and Obedience: A Very Short History

17:15 to 17:45 : Data Politics I: Internet and Politics

Elspeth Guild, Queen Mary University of London (QMUL): Data Rights: claiming privacy through international institutions, democratic claims and global world
Tomaso Venturini, CIS & CNRS : The data politics of online virality: When junk news become politicised

17:45 to 18:30 : Data Politics II: Book symposium

Dominique Cardon, Sciences Po 
Anthony Amicelle, Université de Montréal 
Karen Lund Peterson, University of Copenhagen

18:30 to 19:00 : Discussion with the audience

 

DAY 2 | September 19th 2019 

14h30-16h00: Rethinking National Security, Intelligence and Surveillance in a digital age I: The future of critical intelligence studies: rethinking secrecy and democracy (UTIC)

Felix Treguer, Sciences Po - CERI: Seeing Like Big Tech. Security Assemblages, Technology, and the Future of State Bureaucracy
Didier Bigo, Sciences Po - CERI, Laurent Bonelli, Université Paris Nanterre : Digital Data and the Transnational Intelligence Space

General Discussion opened by Mark Phytian, University of Leicester

16h-16h30: coffe break 

16h30 - 18h30  Rethinking National Security, Intelligence and Surveillance in a digital age II: Companion Researches from abroad

Karen Lund Peterson, University of Copenhagen: Bringing in the public. Intelligence on the frontier between state and civil society
Killian Veith, SNV-Germany: Research Handbook on Human Rights and Digital Technology: Global politics, law and International Relations General Discussion, opened by Emma Mc Cluskey, King's College London

18:00 to 18:30 : Concluding remarks: “What Way Forward?”
Thorsten Wetzling,
SNV
Emma McCluskey, King's College London
 
 

Responsable scientifique: Didier Bigo,  Sciences Po-CERI

Organisé par : CERI