Hello everyone, Please consider sending a paper to a special issue of Surveillance & Society: *Resisting Surveillance through Data Visibility and Invisibility *(papers due 1 March 2025). I am one of the guest editors for this issue. Building upon the critical theories of data feminism, data justice, and data colonialism, amongst others, this special issue invites contributors to reflect critically and creatively on the ideas of data visibility and data invisibility (Taylor 2017). Topics may include (but are not limited to) the following: - How might people disengage from data markets and/or work to correct, erase, or disrupt state or corporate datasets, such as the right to opt-out of discriminatory profiling programs? - What surveillance practices might enable certain populations to gain greater visibility to governments with the intention of enabling equity-seeking groups to access rights, services, and justice? - What resistance strategies may be undertaken to enable greater invisibility from state/corporate surveillance practices? - What creative sabotage might enable people to resist or disrupt governmental or corporate surveillance programs? - How might “data capitalism” be reformed or destabilized, such as by restricting the monetization of certain types of data? - How might social movements offer new or radical resistance to datafication practices by governments or corporations? - What collective practices might be designed to fairly share data’s social and economic benefits amongst the public? - How might community-led data collection practices help counter the informational and power asymmetries inherent in state and/or corporate surveillance practices? - What are the limits of individual- or community-based resistance to state and/or corporate surveillance practices? *Submission Information*: This special issue invites contributors from across the social sciences and humanities to further develop the above-noted research projects. We welcome submissions from both Global South and Global North perspectives, as well as those that challenge colonial and western perspectives on anti-surveillance strategies. We are also particularly interested in work that centers the experiences and perspectives of historically marginalized groups. We also welcome innovative or alternative methodologies or creative expression. Submissions will undergo a peer-review and revision process prior to publication. Submissions should be original work, neither previously published nor under consideration for publication elsewhere. All references to previous work by contributors should be masked in the text (e.g., “Author, 2024”). We anticipate publishing this issue in March 2026. All papers must be submitted for consideration through the online submission system <https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/surveillance-and-society/about/submissions> no later than *March 1, 2025.* Please submit the papers in a MS Word-compatible format. For further formatting information, please consult see the *Surveillance & Society *submission guidelines <https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/surveillance-and-society/about/submissions> . For the *full call for papers*, see https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/surveillance-and-society/announceme... Kind regards, Natasha Tusikov Natasha Tusikov, PhD (she/her) Associate Professor, Criminology Program Department of Social Science Ross South 714A York University 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3 Office: 416.736.2100 ext. 30158 ntusikov@yorku.ca @NTusikov <ntusikov@yorku.ca> *New book!* Haggart, B. and N. Tusikov (2023) *The New Knowledge: Information, Data and the Remaking of Global Power*. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. Open access ebook available at: https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781538160879/The-New-Knowledge-Information-Data-and... Haggart, B., Tusikov, N., and JA. Scholte, eds. (2021) *Power and Authority in Internet Governance: Return of the State?* London: Routledge. Now available open access! https://www.routledge.com/Power-and-Authority-in-Internet-Governance-Return-... Haggart, B., Henne, K., and N. Tusikov. eds. (2019) *Information, Technology and Control in a Changing World: Understanding Power Structures in the 21st Century*. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Tusikov, N. (2017) *Chokepoints: Global Private Regulation on the Internet*. Oakland: University of California Press.