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Conflicts Conflicts
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Of Primary Importance Of Primary Importance
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Kids Grow Up: A Process View Kids Grow Up: A Process View
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Concluding Thoughts and Lingering Questions Concluding Thoughts and Lingering Questions
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8 Children: Slap That Baby’s Bottom, Embed That ID Chip, and Let It Begin
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Published:May 2016
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Abstract
This chapter reports on PISHI (Parents Insist on Surveillance Help Inc.) the statement of a fictional social movement organization promoting surveillance of children. We see surveillance as care and concern (or at least that is how it is sold). Family surveillance is not spying on children, rather it is prevention and protection. With respect to personal information borders of children, overprotection of the dependent is a virtue and under protection a vice. Relative to work or government contexts the surveillance here is more personal, diffuse, informal, dutiful and caring and the subjects are dependent children in the private setting of the home. This case of surveillance advocacy is followed by a critique that again notes the legitimate conflicts of interest and lack of clarity regarding societal expectations about how children are to be treated and how this changes as they grow up.
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