Categories: NewsOxford Said, UK

Regulation by stealth: Oxford study shows how our lives are controlled

Ever wondered how the rules we live by came to be rules? Who decided? Now, perhaps more than ever before, we are governed through the small everyday routines, actions and objects by which we are surrounded. This is control we are rarely conscious of, which is seldom open and transparent, and over which we have little recourse. Faculty from Said Business School and Goldsmiths explore this phenomena in their new book Mundane Governance.

 

Mundane Governance by Professor Steve Woolgar of Saїd Business School, University of Oxford and Professor Dan Neyland of Goldsmiths, University of London examines the increasingly regulated world. The regulation is pervasive and often practiced through innocuous everyday objects which most of us do not look at with suspicion as they are a part and parcel of our lives.

For instance, the book takes the very vocal concerns about waste disposal, the proliferation of speed cameras and heightened security measures at airports as the starting point for exploring the ways in which governance and accountability in contemporary life are organized around ordinary, everyday, pervasive objects and technologies.

“Our lives are increasingly regulated and controlled through ordinary objects and technologies. This may appear trivial but this ‘regulation by stealth’ has repercussions for us all” says Professor Woolgar.

[pullquote]Recycling, speed cameras, parking restrictions, ID cards, storage of personal data, airport security, food safety and labelling are the many means by which our actions are shaped or our freedoms limited, often without any discussion[/pullquote]‘There was a time when rubbish was just rubbish. These days rubbish has become an issue – for individual householders, for local authorities, for commercial interests and even for national government.  Whether we like it or not, we are now all participants in a complex, moral system of waste disposal.  Anyone who gets it wrong is open to sanction – not just the moral sanction of neighbours, but the very real sanction of legal action in some instances. How did this all happen?’

Ordinary stuff now has political and social significance and now involves the setting and operation of rules and the monitoring of behaviour in relation to those rules.  How is this done, is it ‘fair’ and should we have a say? Are there alternative ways that these issues could be addressed? What is the justification for the differences that prevail county to county across the UK and beyond? Where do we draw the line between the protection of civil liberties and necessary regulation?

‘Increasingly there is concern about the pervasive creep of regulation and control in our everyday lives, often through seemingly inconsequential objects and routines’ says Professor Neyland. ’ In the media there is frequent coverage of citizens’ outrage around recycling, speed cameras, parking restrictions, ID cards, storage of personal data, airport security, food safety and labelling, and many more means by which our actions are shaped or our freedoms limited, often without any discussion or communication of the underlying logic or alternatives. The so-called “post-code lottery” of this is [pullquote]We wanted to understand just how local authorities and others are exercising this control, and how these new systems become established and quickly carry moral authority – without any of us agreeing to the process

[/pullquote]also of concern whereby the speed at which cameras are triggered varies from area to area, and in some regions speeding drivers may have the opportunity to attend a “re-education” course whereas in others they will receive penalty points.

At its worst, this can all seem random, even Orwellian to observers.  We wanted to explore what is going on here and to understand just how local authorities and others are exercising this control, and how these new systems become established and quickly carry moral authority – without any of us agreeing to the process. We wanted to raise awareness of this development which has been largely neglected by researchers, and to ask what scope there is to challenge these emerging moral orders?’

[pullquote]The most powerful form of social control is to convince people to control themselves. So, rather than targeting manufacturers of packaging, consumers are the focus of environmental efforts through recycling schemes[/pullquote]‘One thing is certain, mundane governance is on the rise, infiltrating and taking over more and more areas of life’ says Professor Woolgar. ‘Like it or not we have all become centrally involved in a system of governance of which we might not be explicitly aware.

The most powerful form of social control is to convince people to control themselves. So, rather than targeting the manufacturers of packaging to make dramatic improvements, consumers have become the focus of environmental efforts through recycling schemes. Rather than focusing on the producers of fast cars, drivers are held accountable for speed. And so it goes on.

Citizens seem to have little power, but have been given much of the responsibility in this new landscape. What emerged from our study is a complex picture of the very fluid, messy and changing nature of governance. Perhaps we should open up a discussion on the issues.’

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