Browne, S. (2015). Dark matters: On the surveillance of Blackness. Duke University Press.
Dubrofsky, R. E., & Magnet, S. A. (Eds.). (2015). Feminist surveillance studies. Duke University Press.
Flores, J. (2016). Caught up: Girls, surveillance, and wraparound incarceration. University of California Press.
Jensen, K. (2024). Oregon’s others: Gender, civil liberties, and the surveillance state in the early twentieth century. University of Washington Press.
Stern, S. W. (2018). The trials of Nina McCall: Sex, surveillance, and the decades-long government plan to imprison “promiscuous” women. Beacon Press.
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CHAPTERS
Gill, R. (2019). Surveillance is a feminist issue. In T. Oren & A. Press (Eds.), The Routledge handbook of contemporary feminism (pp. 146-161). Taylor & Francis Group.
Gilman, M. E. (2021). Feminism, privacy, and law in cyberspace. In D. Brake, M. Chamallas, & V. L. Williams (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of feminism and law in the United States (pp. 552-572). Oxford Academic Press.
Gurrieri, L., & Drenten, J. (2022). Big Brother is monitoring: Feminist surveillance studies and digital consumer culture. In P. Maclaran, L. Stevens, & O. Kravets (Eds.), The Routledge companion to marketing and feminism (eBook). Routledge.
Henshaw, A. (2023). Technological surveillance, states, and gendered insecurity. In A. Henshaw, Digital frontiers in gender and security: Bringing critical perspectives online (pp. 87-102). Bristol University Press.
Larsen, M., & Piché, J. (2009). Public vigilance campaigns and participatory surveillance after 11 September 2001. In S. P. Hier & J. Greenberg (Eds.), Surveillance: Power, problems, and politics (pp. 187-202). University of British Columbia Press.
Selod, S. (2019). Gendered racialization: Muslim American men and women’s encounters with racialized surveillance. In B. Gonzalez-Sobrino & D. R. Goss (Eds.), The mechanisms of racialization beyond the Black/white binary (eBook). Routledge.
Suk, J. (2009). Is privacy a woman? In J. Suk, At home in the law: How the domestic violence revolution is transforming privacy (pp. 106-131). Yale University Press.
Hacker Daniels, A. E., & Peña, S. (2024). The conundrum within “caveat lector”: Unraveling the dissoi logoi in the book banning controversy. Communication and Democracy. https://doi.org/10.1080/27671127.2024.2405649
Jones, J. B., & Chandler, S. (2007). Surveillance and regulation: Control of women casino workers’ bodies. Affilia, 22(2), 150-162. https://doi.org/10.1177/0886109906299049
Magnet, S., & Rodgers, T. (2011). Stripping for the state: Whole body imaging technologies and the surveillance of othered bodies. Feminist Media Studies, 12(1), 101-118. https://doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2011.558352
Redden, S. M., & Terry, J. (2013). The end of the line: Feminist understandings of resistance to full-body scanning technology. International Feminist Journal of Politics, 15(2), 234-253. https://doi.org/10.1080/14616742.2012.741429
Zelezny-Green, R. (2016). “Can you really see what we write online?” Ethics and data privacy in digital research with girls. Girlhood Studies, 9(3). https://doi.org/10.3167/ghs.2016.090306