Disability and surveillance: Disability justice as a framework for educational technology

IF 0.7 Q3 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE
Alexandra Pucciarelli, Emma May
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The increased accessibility of technology is often employed as rationale for data extraction and surveillance. This paper examines critical perspectives on surveillance and educational technologies from Library and Information Science (LIS) literature, as well as those from disability studies that concern technology development more broadly. This research aims to understand how a disability justice framework can interrogate both the overall expansion of surveillance technologies and justifications for increased surveillance that argue that data extraction and analytics lead to increased accessibility for disabled users. As an activist approach toward disability advocacy that underscores the connections between white supremacy, sexism and colonialism as central to ableism, disability justice recognizes surveillance technologies as embedded in systems of power that disproportionately harm people of color, immigrants, transgender people, and gender nonconforming people. Using a disability justice framework, this paper argues against the expansion of surveillance technologies – especially in the name of increasing accessibility.
残疾与监督:残疾正义作为教育技术的框架
越来越多的技术可用性经常被用作数据提取和监视的理由。本文从图书馆和信息科学(LIS)文献以及更广泛地关注技术发展的残疾研究中考察了对监控和教育技术的批判性观点。本研究旨在了解残疾司法框架如何能够质疑监控技术的整体扩张和增加监控的理由,这些理由认为数据提取和分析导致残疾用户的可访问性增加。作为一种倡导残疾的积极手段,残疾司法强调白人至上主义、性别歧视和殖民主义之间的联系是残疾主义的核心,它承认监控技术植根于权力体系,对有色人种、移民、跨性别者和性别不符合者造成了不成比例的伤害。本文利用残疾司法框架,反对扩大监视技术——特别是以增加可及性的名义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
EDUCATION FOR INFORMATION
EDUCATION FOR INFORMATION INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
11.10%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: Information is widely recognized as a vital resource in economic development. The skills of information handling traditionally associated with libraries, are now in great demand in all sectors, including government, business and commerce. The education and training of information professionals is, therefore, an issue of growing significance. Education for Information has been since 1983 a forum for debate and discussion on education and training issues in the sphere of information handling. It includes refereed full-length articles and short communications on matters of current concern to educators and practitioners alike. Its News section reports on significant activities and events in the international arena.
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