Identification and registration practices in transnational perspective people, papers and practices
Material type: TextPublication details: New York Palgrave Macmillian 2013Description: x,344pISBN:- 9780230354388
- Recording and registration -- Social aspects -- Case studies
- Recording and registration -- Technological innovations -- Case studies
- Identification -- Social aspects -- Case studies
- Identification -- Technological innovations -- Case studies
- Political Science / Political Freedom & Security / Civil Rights
- Political Science / Public Affairs & Administration
- Political Science / Political Freedom & Security / Human Rights
- Science / History
- Social Science/ Criminology
- 22 ID- 338.88
- HA38.A1 I44 2013
- POL004000 | POL017000 | POL035010 | SCI034000 | SOC004000
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 338.88 ID- (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 128484 |
Machine generated contents note: -- Editors and Contributors -- Introduction; Ilsen About, James R. Brown and Gayle Lonergan -- PART I: THE CENTRAL STATE: SYSTEMS, STANDARDS, AND TECHNIQUES -- 1. Individual Identity and Identification in 18th Century France; Vincent Denis -- 2. Registration as Privilege: The Moscow Residence Permit as a Mark of Privilege in the Russian Empire, 1881-1905; Gayle Lonergan -- 3. Dissemination of the Argentine Dactyloscopy System in the Early Twentieth Century: Local, Regional and International Dimensions; Mercedes Garci;a Ferrari -- 4. The Philosopher and the Printer: Practices of Criminal Identification in Fascist Italy; Massimiliano Pagani -- 5. De-Neutralizing Identification: S. & Marper v. United Kingdom, Biometric Databases, Uniqueness, Privacy, and Human Rights; Simon A. Cole -- 6. The Biometric Fetish; Emilio Mordini and Andrew P. Rebera -- PART II: BEYOND THE CENTRAL STATE: COMMUNITY, COMMERCE, AND ECONOMICS -- 7. The Parish Registers in Early Modern English History: Registration from Above and Below; Simon Szreter -- 8. An Unusually Open Identification Number System: The Icelandic Kennitala; Ian Watson -- 9. From Custom to Civil Status Registration: The Anthropology of Kinship and the Rule of Law; Claudine Dardy -- 10. Consuming Identity and Consuming the State in Britain since c. 1750; Edward Higgs -- PART III: THE IDENTIFIED: PERCEPTION, RESISTANCE, AND NEGOTIATION -- 11. Cat and Mouse Games: The State, Indians in the Cape and the Permit System, 1900s-1920s; Uma Dhupelia-Mesthrie -- 12. A Paper Trap. Exiles versus the Identification Police in France during the Interwar Period; Ilsen About -- 13. 'Ausweis Bitte!' Identity and Identification in Nazi Germany; Jane Caplan -- 14. What Do You Think The Household Register Is? Perceptions of Koseki Relating to Social Order and Individual Rights in 1950s and 2000s Japan; Karl Jakob Krogness -- 15. Denouncing and Resisting. Identity Assignment Policies in France, 1970-2010; Pierre Piazza -- 16. 'Establishing Your True Identity:' Immigration Detention and Contemporary Identification Debates; Melanie Griffiths -- Afterword -- The Future of Identification's Past: Reflections on the Development of Historical Identification Studies; Jane Caplan and Edward Higgs -- Index.
"Utilising sources that range from 16th century parish registers to the 21st century supermarket loyalty card, this collection examines the history and development of identification documents and surveillance techniques over the past 500 years. Combining the knowledge of several experts from a variety of disciplines, this volume successfully demonstrates how identification and registration can enable and empower a population, particularly if the interests of the state and population coincide. It also reveals the weakness of states or corporations when dealing with issues such as popular resistance and fraud, despite great leaps forward in the scientific methods of identifying individuals. This important book offers a vital contribution to the literature on a variety of topical subject areas such as biometric identification, immigration control and personal data use, as such it is of interest to students and scholars of civil and human rights amongst other disciplines"--
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