✨ Excited to share our new paper, "Inequalities in Privacy Cynicism: An Intersectional Analysis of Agency Constraints," which was just published in Big Data & Society!

Christian P. Hoffmann, Giulia Ranzini and I examine how structural constraints limit user agency, leading to widespread privacy cynicism. Using an intersectional lens, we show the unequal impact constraints have on different social groups, thus shaping digital inequality. The article is freely available: https://lnkd.in/ehAYBT3B

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πŸ” Our article connects critical data studies with privacy research and adjacent literature, including an in-depth discussion and framework how interpersonal, cultural, technological, economic, and political constraints reduce users' privacy agency and might lead to cynicism - but in different ways depending on individuals' intersectional positionality. We also provide suggestions for breaking the cycle of disempowerment experienced by many, including technological, social and legal strategies.

πŸ’¬ We'd love to hear your thoughts and discuss ways to address privacy and agency challenges in today's digital society. How do you see these dynamics playing out?

πŸ‘‡ The article is part of a Big Data & Society special theme on digital resignation and privacy cynicism. Check out the fascinating articles published so far in the special theme: https://journals.sagepub.com/page/bds/digitalresignationandprivacycynicism

#privacy #agency #intersectionality #openaccess #DigitalDivide #digital #inequality #divide #constraints #DigitalResignation