Arctic childhood in data-driven culture: Wearable technology and children’s right to privacy in Finland

Author:

Vänskä Annamari1ORCID,Mickelsson Sini2ORCID,Morozova Daria3ORCID,Härkönen Heidi2ORCID,Gurova Olga4ORCID,Pirjatanniemi Elina5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ISNI: 0000000108389418 Aalto University

2. ISNI: 0000000120971371 University of Turku

3. ISNI: 0000000106698188 Glasgow Caledonian University

4. ISNI: 0000000404001203 Laurea University of Applied Sciences

5. ISNI: 0000000122358415 Åbo Akademi University

Abstract

The article discusses the definition of ‘Arctic childhood’: how it affects the ideal of childhood in the Arctic countries while differentiating it from understandings of childhood in more temperate climates. Arctic childhood offers novel viewpoints to the concept of childhood. It grants agency to the non-human world: environment, weather and design solutions such as clothes and wearable technology. It also highlights how these shape the concept of childhood in the Arctic and beyond. The article focuses on wearable technology, which brings new legal issues to considerations of childhood in data-driven culture. The central argument is two-fold. As design solutions, wearable technology may preserve the ideal of the active child, essential to Arctic and Finnish childhoods. Legally, however, there are some issues: since wearable technology is designed to bring forth and share with others the vital functions of the child’s body, it raises concerns about children’s fundamental right to privacy and data protection. By bringing together fashion studies and the doctrinal study of law, and by using wearable technology as an example, the article argues that multidisciplinary approaches are needed when new technologies designed to track and monitor individuals are offered to minors in the name of staying healthy.

Funder

Strategic Research Council at the Research Council of Finland

Publisher

Intellect

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Visual Arts and Performing Arts

Reference69 articles.

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3. Abandonment of personal quantification: A review and empirical study investigating reasons for wearable activity tracking attrition;Computers in Human Behavior,2020

4. Child’s best interest and informational self-determination: What the GDPR can learn from children’s rights;International Data Privacy Law,2018

5. Villain or guardian? “The smart toy is watching you now…”;Information & Communications Technology Law,2021

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