Data Borders: How Silicon Valley Is Building an Industry Around Immigrants


Price:
Sale price$37.44

Description

Data Borders investigates entrenched and emerging borderland technology that ensnares all people in an intimate web of surveillance where data resides and defines citizenship. Detailing the new trend of biologically mapping undocumented people through biotechnologies, Melissa Villa-Nicholas shows how surreptitious monitoring of Latinx immigrants is the focus of and driving force behind Silicon Valley's growing industry within defense technology manufacturing. Villa-Nicholas reveals a murky network that gathers data on marginalized communities for purposes of exploitation and control that implicates law enforcement, border patrol, and ICE, but that also pulls in public workers and the general public, often without their knowledge or consent. Enriched by interviews of Latinx immigrants living in the borderlands who describe their daily use of technology and their caution around surveillance, this book argues that in order to move beyond a heavily surveilled state that dehumanizes both immigrants and citizens, we must first understand how our data is being collected, aggregated, correlated, and weaponized with artificial intelligence and then push for immigrant and citizen information privacy rights along the border and throughout the United States.

Author: Melissa Villa-Nicholas
Publisher: University of California Press
Published: 07/11/2023
Pages: 224
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.70lbs
Size: 6.00h x 8.90w x 0.60d
ISBN13: 9780520386075
ISBN10: 0520386078
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Technology Studies
- Social Science | Ethnic Studies | Caribbean & Latin American Studies
- Social Science | Activism & Social Justice

About the Author
Melissa Villa-Nicholas is Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Library and Information Studies at the University of Rhode Island. Her work focuses on the Latinx histories and practices of information and technology, immigrant information rights, and critical approaches to information science. She is author of Latinas on the Line: Invisible Information Workers in Telecommunications, which received an honorable mention for the inaugural Labor Tech Research Network book award.