geoslavery
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From geo- + slavery, coined by Jerome Dobson and Peter Fisher in 2003 and refined in 2007.
Noun
[edit]geoslavery (uncountable)
- The use of geolocation and geosurveillance technologies to monitor and control individuals in a coercive or surreptitious manner, with the control being overpowering and uncompensated.
- 2010, Mark S. Monmonier, No dig, no fly, no go: how\ maps restrict and control, page 181:
- Images of antebellum plantation society aside, geoslavery has become an accepted practice among employers wary of misuse of company vehicles — whether the worker who disappears for an hour is pursuing an extramarital affair or monopolizing a stool at the donut shop […]
- 2011, Timothy L. Nyerges, Robert B. McMaster, The SAGE Handbook of GIS and Society, page 511:
- As a worst-case scenario, some scholars have also contemplated the possibility of geoslavery in this age of ubiquitous computing […]
References
[edit]- Dobson, J. E., and P. F. Fisher. 2003. Geoslavery, IEEE Technology and Society Magazine 22(1): 47 52.
- Dobson, J. E., and P. F. Fisher. 2007. The Panopticon's Changing Geography, Geographical Review 97(3): 307-323.