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Facial recognition technology for policing and surveillance in the Global South: a call for bans

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  • Peter Dauvergne

Abstract

The use of facial recognition technology (FRT) for policing and surveillance is spreading across Asia, Africa and Latin America. Advocates are saying this technology can solve crimes, locate missing people and prevent terrorist attacks. Yet, as this article argues, deploying FRT for policing and surveillance poses a grave threat to civil society, especially systems to identify or track people without any criminal history. In every political system, this has the potential to deepen discriminatory policing, have a chilling effect on activism and turn everyone into a suspect. The dangers rise exponentially, moreover, in places with inconsistent rule of law, poor human rights records, weak privacy and data laws and authoritarian rulers – traits common across scores of countries now installing FRT. Regulating use is unlikely to prevent these harms, the article contends, given the powerful political and corporate forces in play, given the ways firms push legal limits, exploit loopholes and lobby legislators, and given the tendency over time of surveillance technology to creep across state agencies and into new forms of social control. Calls to ban FRT are growing louder by the day. This article makes the case for why bans are especially necessary in the Global South.

Suggested Citation

  • Peter Dauvergne, 2022. "Facial recognition technology for policing and surveillance in the Global South: a call for bans," Third World Quarterly, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 43(9), pages 2325-2335, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:ctwqxx:v:43:y:2022:i:9:p:2325-2335
    DOI: 10.1080/01436597.2022.2080654
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