Trends, Aftermaths, Emancipations
Emerging Digital Citizenship Regimes
ISBN: 978-1-80382-332-4, eISBN: 978-1-80382-331-7
Publication date: 25 May 2022
Abstract
Insofar as the digital layer cannot be detached from the current democratic challenges of the 21st century including neoliberalism, scales, civic engagement and action research-driven co-production methodologies; this chapter advances trends, aftermaths and emancipatory strategies for the post-pandemic technopolitical democracies. Consequently, it suggests a democratic toolbox encompassing four intertwined trends, aftermaths and emancipations including (1) the context characterised by the algorithmic nations, (2) challenges stemming from data sovereignty, (3) mobilisation seen from the digital rights perspective and (4) grassroots innovation embodied through data co-operatives. This chapter elucidates that in the absence of coordinated and interdependent strategies to claim digital rights and data sovereignty by algorithmic nations, on the one hand, Big Tech data-opolies, and on the other hand, the GDPR led by the European Commission might bound (negatively) and expand (positively), respectively, algorithmic nations' capacity to mitigate the negative side effects of the algorithmic disruption in Western democracies.
Keywords
- Technopolitics
- Democracy
- Post-pandemic
- COVID
- Citizenship
- Algorithmic Nations
- Data sovereignty
- Digital rights
- Data co-operatives
- Social innovation
- GDPR
- Co-operatives
- Vulnerabilities
- Brexit
- Biosurveillance
- Misinformation
- Technological sovereignty
- Digital sovereignty
- Cybercontrol
- Civil liberties
- Digital foundational economy
Citation
Calzada, I. (2022), "Trends, Aftermaths, Emancipations", Emerging Digital Citizenship Regimes, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 131-167. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80382-331-720221005
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2022 Igor Calzada. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited