Beyond Big Brother: How to Study Tech-Driven Authoritarianism With Restricted Access to State Institutions
With the tremendous advancements in Internet, big data analytics, and artificial intelligence, the power and potential of digital technologies has a special appeal to political rulers. How can qualitative researchers explore tech-driven authoritarianism when they have limited access to state institu...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ethnography 2024-09, Vol.25 (3), p.394-413 |
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description | With the tremendous advancements in Internet, big data analytics, and artificial intelligence, the power and potential of digital technologies has a special appeal to political rulers. How can qualitative researchers explore tech-driven authoritarianism when they have limited access to state institutions? This article addresses this question by arguing for a wider and more nuanced understanding of tech-driven authoritarianism as a state-market complex mediating the political application of digital technologies. Based on my own research on China’s Internet surveillance, I find that the engagement of the private sector, especially technology companies, in authoritarian control creates new opportunities for qualitative researchers to study state power in non-state fields. By reflecting on my experience of field-site choice, gaining access, and informant recruitment, I discuss how thorough preparation in both theory and fieldwork approaches help qualitative investigators develop creative ways of collecting information on tech-driven authoritarianism. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/14661381221120208 |
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subjects | Access Artificial intelligence Authoritarianism Big Data Internet Qualitative research Recruitment State power Surveillance Technology |
title | Beyond Big Brother: How to Study Tech-Driven Authoritarianism With Restricted Access to State Institutions |
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