Identify and Sort: How Digital Power Changed World Politics

Author:   Jd Candidate Josef Teboho Ansorge (Yale Law School) ,  Ansorge Josef Teboho
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780190245559


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   14 July 2016
Format:   Paperback
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Identify and Sort: How Digital Power Changed World Politics


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Author:   Jd Candidate Josef Teboho Ansorge (Yale Law School) ,  Ansorge Josef Teboho
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.408kg
ISBN:  

9780190245559


ISBN 10:   0190245557
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   14 July 2016
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Identify and Sort is a fascinating work that takes the process of investigation, identification and, one might add, manipulation from the ancient world down to a window on the future. Ansorge looks at the moral, legal and personal implications of supervision and identification through history and in the digital present. He provides information and asks questions about the utilities and modalities of specification and its often contradictory personal and administrative/political functions. In the process, and it is a book about process, he also presents an analysis of how the human mind works analogously across cultures. The book is stimulating, informative and provocative. -- Amb. Robert P. Finn, Non-Resident Fellow, Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University A radical take on information technology and political power where the sovereign is refigured as the one that identifies and sorts. Ansorge provides the astute analysis and the practical tools to challenge these new forms of political-digital-power. He shows how we live in a global regime of a technics of politics that appropriates our subjectivity, and how we are able to re-appropriate our personhood, if we first understand that it is being taken from us. -- Jenny Edkins, Professor of International Politics, Aberystwyth University With this book, Josef Ansorge distinguishes himself as one of our most promising and innovative young scholars. Drawing on a capacious and intellectually dazzling range of disciplines and lines of inquiry, he offers an original and provocative new way of understanding the creation and evolution of the state, its complex relationships with citizens and society, and the very meaning of human identity. -- William Inboden, Executive Director and William Powers, Jr. Chair, Clements Center, University of Texas, Austin From ancient rituals to modern databases, this is a fascinating account of the techniques of sovereign power in our time. Drawing on a distinction made by Foucault, but not pursued by him in the impressive way Ansorge has done, this study shifts our attention from the internalization of political authority to the methods used for controlling populations without their awareness. Full of insights, Identify and Sort is a book that should be read by everyone concerned to understand modern power. --Talal Asad, Distinguished Professor, Graduate Center, The City University of New York Brilliant and riveting. From the history of ear-cutting in ancient Egypt to the disambiguation protocols of modern digital power, Josef Ansorge shows us how sovereigns have throughout history sought to satisfy their insatiable need to mark, count, name, and categorize the people they govern. Eye-opening, indispensable, and commanding in its breadth, Identify and Sort reveals strange new truths on every page. --Jed Rubenfeld, Robert R. Slaughter Professor of Law at Yale Law School Sovereigns have always tried to sort and identify people. Modern information technology has brought these formerly opaque processes into the open, and governments, even in democratic states, have gained public support for extensive electronic intrusion in peoples' lives on the grounds of security. Seeing like a state involves seeing through a computer screen. Our political and legal discourses do not cope well with the threat of digital power. They require a new science of politics, and this book represents a thoughtful, creative, and necessary step in this direction. --Ned Lebow, Professor of International Political Theory, King's College London In our 'totalitarian digital present, ' as Josef Teboho Ansorge vividly demonstrates, the state can see in new ways, both further in space and minutely in scale. His intrepid survey of theoretical and historical contexts in which to grasp the practices and tools of the contemporary sovereign is brilliant and thought-provoking. --Samuel Moyn, Professor of Law and History, Harvard University Ansorge combines cutting-edge technical expertise with brilliant political insight. He forces us to confront the pervasive power dynamics of the surveillance state - and the deep challenges involved in securing a humane society in the twenty-first century. -- Bruce Ackerman, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science, Yale University In this hugely impressive book that deftly weaves grand theory with illuminating empirical examples, Ansorge has gifted us with remarkable insights into the historical origins and contemporary workings of computerized databases as they reorder societies and recast identities. An indispensable read for any engagement with the nature of politics and power in the digital age. --Antoine Bousquet, Senior Lecturer in International Relations, and author of The Scientific Way of Warfare: Order and Chaos on the Battlefields of Modernity Identify and Sort is a fascinating work that takes the process of investigation, identification and, one might add, manipulation from the ancient world down to a window on the future. Ansorge looks at the moral, legal and personal implications of supervision and identification through history and in the digital present. He provides information and asks questions about the utilities and modalities of specification and its often contradictory personal and administrative/political functions. In the process, and it is a book about process, he also presents an analysis of how the human mind works analogously across cultures. The book is stimulating, informative and provocative. -- Amb. Robert P. Finn, Non-Resident Fellow, Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University A radical take on information technology and political power where the sovereign is refigured as the one that identifies and sorts. Ansorge provides the astute analysis and the practical tools to challenge these new forms of political-digital-power. He shows how we live in a global regime of a technics of politics that appropriates our subjectivity, and how we are able to re-appropriate our personhood, if we first understand that it is being taken from us. -- Jenny Edkins, Professor of International Politics, Aberystwyth University With this book, Josef Ansorge distinguishes himself as one of our most promising and innovative young scholars. Drawing on a capacious and intellectually dazzling range of disciplines and lines of inquiry, he offers an original and provocative new way of understanding the creation and evolution of the state, its complex relationships with citizens and society, and the very meaning of human identity. -- William Inboden, Executive Director and William Powers, Jr. Chair, Clements Center, University of Texas, Austin From ancient rituals to modern databases, this is a fascinating account of the techniques of sovereign power in our time. Drawing on a distinction made by Foucault, but not pursued by him in the impressive way Ansorge has done, this study shifts our attention from the internalization of political authority to the methods used for controlling populations without their awareness. Full of insights, Identify and Sort is a book that should be read by everyone concerned to understand modern power. --Talal Asad, Distinguished Professor, Graduate Center, The City University of New York Brilliant and riveting. From the history of ear-cutting in ancient Egypt to the disambiguation protocols of modern digital power, Josef Ansorge shows us how sovereigns have throughout history sought to satisfy their insatiable need to mark, count, name, and categorize the people they govern. Eye-opening, indispensable, and commanding in its breadth, Identify and Sort reveals strange new truths on every page. --Jed Rubenfeld, Robert R. Slaughter Professor of Law at Yale Law School Sovereigns have always tried to sort and identify people. Modern information technology has brought these formerly opaque processes into the open, and governments, even in democratic states, have gained public support for extensive electronic intrusion in peoples' lives on the grounds of security. Seeing like a state involves seeing through a computer screen. Our political and legal discourses do not cope well with the threat of digital power. They require a new science of politics, and this book represents a thoughtful, creative, and necessary step in this direction. --Ned Lebow, Professor of International Political Theory, King's College London In our 'totalitarian digital present, ' as Josef Teboho Ansorge vividly demonstrates, the state can see in new ways, both further in space and minutely in scale. His intrepid survey of theoretical and historical contexts in which to grasp the practices and tools of the contemporary sovereign is brilliant and thought-provoking. --Samuel Moyn, Professor of Law and History, Harvard University Ansorge combines cutting-edge technical expertise with brilliant political insight. He forces us to confront the pervasive power dynamics of the surveillance state - and the deep challenges involved in securing a humane society in the twenty-first century. -- Bruce Ackerman, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science, Yale University In this hugely impressive book that deftly weaves grand theory with illuminating empirical examples, Ansorge has gifted us with remarkable insights into the historical origins and contemporary workings of computerized databases as they reorder societies and recast identities. An indispensable read for any engagement with the nature of politics and power in the digital age. --Antoine Bousquet, Senior Lecturer in International Relations, and author of The Scientific Way of Warfare: Order and Chaos on the Battlefields of Modernity


Identify and Sort is a fascinating work that takes the process of investigation, identification and, one might add, manipulation from the ancient world down to a window on the future. Ansorge looks at the moral, legal and personal implications of supervision and identification through history and in the digital present. He provides information and asks questions about the utilities and modalities of specification and its often contradictory personal and administrative/political functions. In the process, and it is a book about process, he also presents an analysis of how the human mind works analogously across cultures. The book is stimulating, informative and provocative. -- Amb. Robert P. Finn, Non-Resident Fellow, Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University A radical take on information technology and political power where the sovereign is refigured as the one that identifies and sorts. Ansorge provides the astute analysis and the practical tools to challenge these new forms of political-digital-power. He shows how we live in a global regime of a technics of politics that appropriates our subjectivity, and how we are able to re-appropriate our personhood, if we first understand that it is being taken from us. -- Jenny Edkins, Professor of International Politics, Aberystwyth University With this book, Josef Ansorge distinguishes himself as one of our most promising and innovative young scholars. Drawing on a capacious and intellectually dazzling range of disciplines and lines of inquiry, he offers an original and provocative new way of understanding the creation and evolution of the state, its complex relationships with citizens and society, and the very meaning of human identity. -- William Inboden, Executive Director and William Powers, Jr. Chair, Clements Center, University of Texas, Austin From ancient rituals to modern databases, this is a fascinating account of the techniques of sovereign power in our time. Drawing on a distinction made by Foucault, but not pursued by him in the impressive way Ansorge has done, this study shifts our attention from the internalization of political authority to the methods used for controlling populations without their awareness. Full of insights, Identify and Sort is a book that should be read by everyone concerned to understand modern power. --Talal Asad, Distinguished Professor, Graduate Center, The City University of New York Brilliant and riveting. From the history of ear-cutting in ancient Egypt to the disambiguation protocols of modern digital power, Josef Ansorge shows us how sovereigns have throughout history sought to satisfy their insatiable need to mark, count, name, and categorize the people they govern. Eye-opening, indispensable, and commanding in its breadth, Identify and Sort reveals strange new truths on every page. --Jed Rubenfeld, Robert R. Slaughter Professor of Law at Yale Law School Sovereigns have always tried to sort and identify people. Modern information technology has brought these formerly opaque processes into the open, and governments, even in democratic states, have gained public support for extensive electronic intrusion in peoples' lives on the grounds of security. Seeing like a state involves seeing through a computer screen. Our political and legal discourses do not cope well with the threat of digital power. They require a new science of politics, and this book represents a thoughtful, creative, and necessary step in this direction. --Ned Lebow, Professor of International Political Theory, King's College London In our 'totalitarian digital present, ' as Josef Teboho Ansorge vividly demonstrates, the state can see in new ways, both further in space and minutely in scale. His intrepid survey of theoretical and historical contexts in which to grasp the practices and tools of the contemporary sovereign is brilliant and thought-provoking. --Samuel Moyn, Professor of Law and History, Harvard University Ansorge combines cutting-edge technical expertise with brilliant political insight. He forces us to confront the pervasive power dynamics of the surveillance state - and the deep challenges involved in securing a humane society in the twenty-first century. -- Bruce Ackerman, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science, Yale University In this hugely impressive book that deftly weaves grand theory with illuminating empirical examples, Ansorge has gifted us with remarkable insights into the historical origins and contemporary workings of computerized databases as they reorder societies and recast identities. An indispensable read for any engagement with the nature of politics and power in the digital age. --Antoine Bousquet, Senior Lecturer in International Relations, and author of The Scientific Way of Warfare: Order and Chaos on the Battlefields of Modernity


Identify and Sort is a fascinating work that takes the process of investigation, identification and, one might add, manipulation from the ancient world down to a window on the future. Ansorge looks at the moral, legal and personal implications of supervision and identification through history and in the digital present. He provides information and asks questions about the utilities and modalities of specification and its often contradictory personal and administrative/political functions. In the process, and it is a book about process, he also presents an analysis of how the human mind works analogously across cultures. The book is stimulating, informative and provocative. -- Amb. Robert P. Finn, Non-Resident Fellow, Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University A radical take on information technology and political power where the sovereign is refigured as the one that identifies and sorts. Ansorge provides the astute analysis and the practical tools to challenge these new forms of political-digital-power. He shows how we live in a global regime of a technics of politics that appropriates our subjectivity, and how we are able to re-appropriate our personhood, if we first understand that it is being taken from us. -- Jenny Edkins, Professor of International Politics, Aberystwyth University With this book, Josef Ansorge distinguishes himself as one of our most promising and innovative young scholars. Drawing on a capacious and intellectually dazzling range of disciplines and lines of inquiry, he offers an original and provocative new way of understanding the creation and evolution of the state, its complex relationships with citizens and society, and the very meaning of human identity. -- William Inboden, Executive Director and William Powers, Jr. Chair, Clements Center, University of Texas, Austin From ancient rituals to modern databases, this is a fascinating account of the techniques of sovereign power in our time. Drawing on a distinction made by Foucault, but not pursued by him in the impressive way Ansorge has done, this study shifts our attention from the internalization of political authority to the methods used for controlling populations without their awareness. Full of insights, Identify and Sort is a book that should be read by everyone concerned to understand modern power. --Talal Asad, Distinguished Professor, Graduate Center, The City University of New York Brilliant and riveting. From the history of ear-cutting in ancient Egypt to the disambiguation protocols of modern digital power, Josef Ansorge shows us how sovereigns have throughout history sought to satisfy their insatiable need to mark, count, name, and categorize the people they govern. Eye-opening, indispensable, and commanding in its breadth, Identify and Sort reveals strange new truths on every page. --Jed Rubenfeld, Robert R. Slaughter Professor of Law at Yale Law School Sovereigns have always tried to sort and identify people. Modern information technology has brought these formerly opaque processes into the open, and governments, even in democratic states, have gained public support for extensive electronic intrusion in peoples' lives on the grounds of security. Seeing like a state involves seeing through a computer screen. Our political and legal discourses do not cope well with the threat of digital power. They require a new science of politics, and this book represents a thoughtful, creative, and necessary step in this direction. --Ned Lebow, Professor of International Political Theory, King's College London In our 'totalitarian digital present, ' as Josef Teboho Ansorge vividly demonstrates, the state can see in new ways, both further in space and minutely in scale. His intrepid survey of theoretical and historical contexts in which to grasp the practices and tools of the contemporary sovereign is brilliant and thought-provoking. --Samuel Moyn, Professor of Law and History, Harvard University Ansorge combines cutting-edge technical expertise with brilliant political insight. He forces us to confront the pervasive power dynamics of the surveillance state - and the deep challenges involved in securing a humane society in the twenty-first century. -- Bruce Ackerman, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science, Yale University In this hugely impressive book that deftly weaves grand theory with illuminating empirical examples, Ansorge has gifted us with remarkable insights into the historical origins and contemporary workings of computerized databases as they reorder societies and recast identities. An indispensable read for any engagement with the nature of politics and power in the digital age. --Antoine Bousquet, Senior Lecturer in International Relations, and author of The Scientific Way of Warfare: Order and Chaos on the Battlefields of Modernity


Identify and Sort is a fascinating work that takes the process of investigation, identification and, one might add, manipulation from the ancient world down to a window on the future. Ansorge looks at the moral, legal and personal implications of supervision and identification through history and in the digital present. He provides information and asks questions about the utilities and modalities of specification and its often contradictory personal and administrative/political functions. In the process, and it is a book about process, he also presents an analysis of how the human mind works analogously across cultures. The book is stimulating, informative and provocative. -- Amb. Robert P. Finn, Non-Resident Fellow, Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University A radical take on information technology and political power where the sovereign is refigured as the one that identifies and sorts. Ansorge provides the astute analysis and the practical tools to challenge these new forms of political-digital-power. He shows how we live in a global regime of a technics of politics that appropriates our subjectivity, and how we are able to re-appropriate our personhood, if we first understand that it is being taken from us. -- Jenny Edkins, Professor of International Politics, Aberystwyth University


Author Information

Josef Teboho Ansorge practices law in New York City. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge and a J.D. from Yale Law School.

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