Abstract:
This article discusses the biopolitical dimension of digital circula-
tion in the specific context of refugee relief. Drawing up on observational
fieldwork conducted in Nahr el Bared, one of the largest Palestinian refu-
gee camps in North Lebanon, it explores how the digital capture of social
and spatial evidences fundamentally transforms the social capital invested in
local knowledge, gradually eroding critical capacities for community self-
governance. Building upon the concept of “data derivatives” developed by
Louise Amore’s, the article focuses in particular on the speculative dimen-
sion of data to suggest that the conversion of an embodied memory into
data-based forms provides powerful means for rendering unsanctioned
claims of ownership and belonging visible, actionable and effective. At the
same time it opens up new modes of “probalistic containment” that restrict
individual and collective life chances under the pretext of democratic par-
ticipation and empowerment.
Citation:
Halkort, M. (2017). Liquefying Social Capital. On the Bio-politics of Digital Circulation in a Palestinian Refugee Camp. TECNOSCIENZA: Italian Journal of Science & Technology Studies, 7(2), 61-80.