Digital technologies and the violent surveillance of nonbinary gender


Journal Article


Jama Shelton, K. Kroehle, Emilie Clark, Kristie L. Seelman, S. Dodd
Journal of gender-Based Violence, 2021


Semantic Scholar DOI
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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Shelton, J., Kroehle, K., Clark, E., Seelman, K. L., & Dodd, S. (2021). Digital technologies and the violent surveillance of nonbinary gender. Journal of Gender-Based Violence. https://doi.org/10.1332/239868021X16153783053180


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Shelton, Jama, K. Kroehle, Emilie Clark, Kristie L. Seelman, and S. Dodd. “Digital Technologies and the Violent Surveillance of Nonbinary Gender.” Journal of gender-Based Violence (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Shelton, Jama, et al. “Digital Technologies and the Violent Surveillance of Nonbinary Gender.” Journal of Gender-Based Violence, 2021, doi:10.1332/239868021X16153783053180.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{jama2021a,
  title = {Digital technologies and the violent surveillance of nonbinary gender},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Journal of gender-Based Violence},
  doi = {10.1332/239868021X16153783053180},
  author = {Shelton, Jama and Kroehle, K. and Clark, Emilie and Seelman, Kristie L. and Dodd, S.}
}

Abstract

The enforcement of the gender binary is a root cause of gender-based violence (GBV) for trans people. Disrupting GBV requires that we ensure that ‘gender’ is not presumed synonymous with White cisgender womanhood. Transfeminists suggest that attaining gender equity requires confronting all forms of oppression that police people and their bodies, including White supremacy, colonialism and capitalism (Silva and Ornat, 2016; Simpkins, 2016). Part of this project, we argue, includes confronting the structures of GBV embedded within digital technologies that are increasingly part of our everyday lives. Informed by transfeminist theory (Koyama, 2003; Stryker and Bettcher, 2016; Simpkins, 2016; Weerawardhana, 2018), we interrogate the ways in which digital technologies naturalise and reinforce GBV against bodies marked as divergent. We examine the subtler ways that digital technology can fortify binary gender as a mechanism of power and control. We highlight how gendered forms of data violence cannot be disentangled from digital technologies that surveil, police or punish on the basis of race, nationhood and citizenship, particularly in relation to predictive policing practices. We conclude with recommendations to guide technological development to reduce the violence enacted upon trans people and those whose gender presentations transgress society’s normative criteria for what constitutes a compliant (read: appropriately gendered) citizen.Key messagesViolence against trans people is inherently gender-based.A root cause of gender-based violence against trans people is the strict reinforcement of the gender binary.Digital technology and predictive policing can fortify binary gender as a mechanism of power and control.Designers of digital technologies and the policymakers regulating surveillance capitalism must interrogate the ways in which their work upholds the gender binary and gender-based violence against trans people.


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