超越提取:重新思考数据的殖民政治经济

IF 3.5 2区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Catriona Gray
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引用次数: 4

摘要

本文提供了一个新颖的概念框架,使实证调查和分析当代数据实践与殖民主义纠缠的不同方式成为可能。从最近关于数据和数据驱动技术的政治和政治经济学的理论出发,包括所谓的数据殖民主义理论,我主张对数据化和数据依赖技术的扩散所涉及的殖民过程进行历史性和差异化的描述。通过对非殖民思想的广泛接触,我证明了有必要超越对日常生活如何数据化并像自然资源一样被提取的研究。我认为这样的类比是不恰当的,并且遮蔽了通过数据化再现的殖民关系。我们对这些过程的理解不是在历史类比中,而是在我们殖民时代的现状中找到更坚实的基础。我认为数据力量的形态不在于价值本身的提取,而在于知识顺序与价值顺序的相互作用。这种重新排序既作为进一步的殖民认知暴力的发动机,又为种族化剥夺的新机器创造了条件。我给出了来自迁移治理的例子,列出了它的目标、对象和操作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
More than Extraction: Rethinking Data's Colonial Political Economy
This article offers a novel conceptual framework to enable empirical investigation and analysis of the different ways in which contemporary data practices are entangled with colonialism. Departing from recent theorizations of the politics and political economy of data and data-driven technologies, including the theory of so-called data colonialism, I argue for a historicized and differentiated account of the colonial processes of dispossession at stake in datafication and the proliferation of data-dependent technologies. By undertaking a broad engagement with decolonial thinking, I demonstrate the need to move beyond an examination of how everyday life is datafied to be extracted like a natural resource. I show that such analogies are inapt and occlude colonial relations reproduced through datafication. Our understanding of these processes would find a firmer footing not in historical analogy, but in our colonial present. I propose that the modality of data's power lies not in the extraction of value as such, but in the interaction of orders of knowledge with orders of value. This reordering both acts as a motor of further colonial epistemic violence and creates the conditions for a new apparatus of racialized dispossession. Giving examples from migration governance, I set out its targets, objects, and operations.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: International Political Sociology (IPS), responds to the need for more productive collaboration among political sociologists, international relations specialists and sociopolitical theorists. It is especially concerned with challenges arising from contemporary transformations of social, political, and global orders given the statist forms of traditional sociologies and the marginalization of social processes in many approaches to international relations. IPS is committed to theoretical innovation, new modes of empirical research and the geographical and cultural diversification of research beyond the usual circuits of European and North-American scholarship.
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