The Chilling Effects of Surveillance and Human Rights: Insights from Qualitative Research in Uganda and Zimbabwe

Author:

Murray Daragh1ORCID,Fussey Pete2ORCID,Hove Kuda3,Wakabi Wairagala4,Kimumwe Paul5,Saki Otto6,Stevens Amy7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Senior Lecturer, University of Essex, Colchester , United Kingdom

2. Professor of Criminology, University of Essex, Colchester , United Kingdom

3. LLM Candidate, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh , United Kingdom

4. Executive Director, CIPESA , Kampala , Uganda

5. Senior Programme Officer, CIPESA , Kampala , Uganda

6. LLD Candidate, University of Western Cape , Cape Town , South Africa

7. Lecturer in Criminology, University of West London , London , United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract States are increasingly developing and deploying large scale surveillance and AI-enabled analytical capabilities. What is uncertain, however, is the impact this surveillance will have. Will it result in a chilling effect whereby individuals modify their behaviour due to the fear of the consequences that may follow? Understanding any such effect is essential: if surveillance activities interfere with the processes by which individuals develop their identity, or undermine democratic processes, the consequences may be almost imperceptible in the short term but profound over the long term. Currently, surveillance-related chilling effects are not well understood, meaning that insufficient weight is given to their potentially society-wide impacts. This article seeks to help redress this balance. Drawing on empirical research in Zimbabwe and Uganda it highlights how State surveillance has chilled behaviour, with significant implications for rights essential to individual development and democratic functioning, specifically the rights to freedom of expression and to freedom of assembly. Importantly, this qualitative research identifies a pattern of common themes or consequences associated with surveillance in general, allowing us to move beyond hypothetical or individual experiences, and providing a greater understanding of the nuances of surveillance-related effects that can help inform decision-making surrounding large scale digital surveillance.

Funder

United Kingdom Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Law,Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,History

Reference42 articles.

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3. Citizens under Suspicion: Responsive Research with Community under Surveillance;Ali;Anthropology & Education Quarterly,2016

4. New York City, USA: Facial Recognition Cameras Reinforcing Racist Policing—New Research,;Amnesty International,2022

5. State Surveillance of Protest and the Rights to Privacy and Freedom of Assembly: a Comparison of Judicial and Protester Perspectives;Aston;European Journal of Law and Technology,2017

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