酷儿隐私保护:图书馆内部的挑战与斗争。

Darra Hofman, Michele A L Villagran
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引用次数: 1

摘要

新冠肺炎疫情迫使图书馆将其服务提供模式转变为在线,将无数互动渗透到数字调解中,从故事时间到向社会群体提出问题,通常是由图书馆控制之外的第三方平台进行的,产生可挖掘的、持久的数字痕迹。一个特别容易受到监视影响的社区是酷儿社区,至少在美国,外出会造成潜在的住房和就业损失,并可能使被暴露者遭受暴力。图书馆,尤其是公共图书馆和学校图书馆,再次成为冲突和抵抗的场所,同性恋者和材料越来越多地受到身体和法律上的攻击。图书馆试图保护其读者免受此类攻击的一个主要屏障是“隐私”。作为专业人士,图书馆员在美国图书馆协会的《图书馆权利法案》和国际图书馆协会和机构联合会的《图书馆环境中的隐私声明》等文件中宣布了对隐私的承诺。然而,这些理想存在于更广泛的系统中,包括法律和文化结构,这些结构限制并使对隐私的抽象承诺复杂化。本文探讨了美国图书馆中酷儿数字隐私的挑战,重点关注酷儿、数字与材料、隐私和图书馆(作为概念和机构)的多义性、越界性。特别是,这篇文章展示了二元约束、以个人权利为导向的隐私法律方法是如何产生的,并受到顺-异规范父权价值观的调解,以及它们发生的社会技术物质(如纸质记录保存)是如何从根本上与酷儿隐私需求不兼容的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Queer Privacy Protection: Challenges and the Fight within Libraries.

The COVID-19 pandemic has forced libraries to shift their service-delivery model online, infiltrating countless interactions-from storytime to reference questions to social groups-into digital mediation, typically by third-party platforms outside the library's control, generating mineable, persistent digital traces. One community particularly vulnerable to the impacts of surveillance is the queer community, where an outing, at least in the United States, imposes a potential loss of housing and employment and may subject the outed person to violence. Libraries-particularly public and school libraries-have once again become sites of conflict and resistance, with queer people and materials increasingly coming under attack both physically and legally. A primary shield by which libraries try to protect their patrons from such attacks is "privacy." Librarians, as professionals, proclaim a commitment to privacy embedded in such documents as the American Library Association's Library Bill of Rights and the International Federation of Library Associations and Institution's Statement on Privacy in the Library Environment. However, these ideals exist in broader systems-including legal and cultural structures-which constrain and complicate abstract commitments to privacy. This article examines the challenges of queer digital privacy within libraries in the United States, focusing on the polysemous, boundary-crossing nature of queerness, the digital and the material, privacy, and libraries (as both concepts and institutions). In particular, this article demonstrates how binary-bound, individual-rights-oriented legal approaches to privacy have arisen, and been mediated, by cis-heteronormative patriarchal values and how the sociotechnical materialities in which they occurred (such as paper-based recordkeeping) are fundamentally incompatible with queer privacy needs.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
25.00%
发文量
71
期刊介绍: The International Journal for the Semiotics of Law is the leading international journal in Legal Semiotics worldwide.   We are pathfinders in mapping the contours of Legal Semiotics.   We provide a high quality blind peer-reviewing process to all the papers via our online submission platform with well-established expert reviewers from all over the world. Our boards reflect this vision and mission.   We welcome submissions in English or in French.   We bridge different fields of expertise to allow a percolation of experience and a sharing of this advanced knowledge from individual, collective and/or institutional fields of competence.   We publish original and high quality papers that should ideally critique, apply or otherwise engage with semiotics or related theory and models of analyses, or with rhetoric, history of political and legal discourses, philosophy of language, pragmatics, sociolinguistics, deconstruction and all types of semiotics analyses including visual semiotics. We also welcome submissions, which reflect on legal philosophy or legal theory, hermeneutics, the relation between psychoanalysis and language, the intersection between law and literature, as well as the relation between law and aesthetics.   We encourage researchers to submit proposals for Special Issues so as to promote their research projects. Submissions should be sent to the EIC.   We aim at publishing Online First to decrease publication delays, and give the possibility to select Open Choice.   Our goal is to identify, promote and publish interdisciplinary and innovative research papers in legal semiotics.
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International Law in The Era of Blockchain: Law Semiotics. Ecosystem Vulnerability. New Semantics for International Law. Vulnerability. From the Paradigmatic Subject to a New Paradigm of the Human Condition? An Introduction. Digitisation and Sharing of Collections: Museum Practices and Copyright During the COVID-19 Pandemic. Queer Privacy Protection: Challenges and the Fight within Libraries.
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