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Literatura académica sobre el tema "Capitalisme de surveillance et d’influence"
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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Capitalisme de surveillance et d’influence"
Pencolé, Marc-Antoine. "Trois théories du capitalisme de surveillance : contrôle, exploitation, reproduction". Réseaux N° 244, n.º 3 (30 de septiembre de 2024): 301–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/res.245.0301.
Texto completoNocetti, Julien y Inna Lyubareva. "Diplomatie numérique et stratégie d’influence politique". Réseaux N° 244, n.º 3 (30 de septiembre de 2024): 11–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/res.245.0011.
Texto completoGrandval, Samuel y Richard Soparnot. "Les actions grises dans la théorie des ressources : une compétence cardinale pour la PME?" Revue internationale P.M.E. 16, n.º 3-4 (16 de febrero de 2012): 121–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1008448ar.
Texto completoRené, Élodie y Stéphanie Monjon. "La civilisation écologique en Chine, entre outil de contrôle domestique et projet de rayonnement mondial". Revue internationale et stratégique 135, n.º 3 (27 de septiembre de 2024): 203–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/ris.135.0203.
Texto completoRobitaille, Marie-Chantal, Virginie Hamel y Jean-Claude Moubarac. "Les activités politiques corporatives et leurs influences sur les politiques publiques : un enjeu important pour la nutrition publique". Nutrition Science en évolution 18, n.º 1 (8 de julio de 2020): 14–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1070393ar.
Texto completoGuillaumin, Béatrice. "Étude comparée des jurisprudences de la CEDH et de la CJUE : vers la consécration d’un jus commune européen du renseignement ?" Études françaises de renseignement et de cyber N° 1, n.º 1 (23 de noviembre de 2023): 23–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/efrc.231.0023.
Texto completoRaus, Rachele. "La traduction des discours européens sur l’intelligence artificielle entre effets de sens et « capitalisme de surveillance »". Mots, n.º 128 (14 de abril de 2022): 65–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/mots.29325.
Texto completoPetrulis, Jason. "Making a global beauty business: the rise and fall of Hong Kong wigs in the 1960s". Entreprises et histoire 111, n.º 2 (6 de septiembre de 2023): 92–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/eh.111.0092.
Texto completoRao, Deepa, Erin Kropac, Minh Do, Karen Roberts y Gayatri Jayaraman. "Rapport d’étape - Embonpoint et obésité chez les enfants au Canada : une évaluation globale". Promotion de la santé et prévention des maladies chroniques au Canada 37, n.º 3 (marzo de 2017): 95–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.24095/hpcdp.37.3.04f.
Texto completoAllegrezza, Serge y Alexandra Rauchs. "The Determinants of Trademark Deposits : an Econometric Investigation (A Case Study of the BENELUX)". Économie appliquée 52, n.º 2 (1999): 51–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ecoap.1999.1689.
Texto completoTesis sobre el tema "Capitalisme de surveillance et d’influence"
Della, Torre Laetitia. "Numérique humanitaire et protection des données : colonialité, souveraineté et dignité". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Compiègne, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024COMP2850.
Texto completoThe exploitation of data by multinationals, cyber-attacks, the proliferation of disinformation operations - today's digital environment is shaken by a growing number of tensions which do not spare humanitarian aid, especially as the sector has been digitalising its operations for the last ten years. NGOs have gradually adopted a series of digital tools, including data processing software, drones, biometric devices and conversational agents, blockchains and artificial intelligence. These organisations are therefore particularly vulnerable to the excesses of surveillance capitalism and the geopolitical tensions running through the digital space. The beneficiaries are the first victims. And this brings us to the following contradiction: humanitarians - actors committed to protecting the victims of crises - have adopted digital tools that can infringe on their privacy, or even put them in danger. The aim of this thesis is to attempt to understand the nature of this paradox, which requires us to examine the different dynamics and tensions that accompany the digitalisation of the humanitarian sector. First of all, the digitisation of humanitarian aid stems from the quantification of aid, which is itself linked to donors' demands to improve the accountability of NGOs and the traceability of funds. The digitisation of the humanitarian sector is also part of a more general move by the international aid community towards the private sector. This movement is accompanied by the spread of an innovation imperative and by a solution-oriented vision of new technologies. But for researchers such as Kristin Sandvik and Mirca Madianou, this innovation imperative is more akin to a form of "techno-colonialism". The dynamics of power resulting from colonial legacies contribute to the construction of beneficiaries as potential passive 'subjects' of experimentation, at the expense of respect for their privacy. The crises are also characterised by exceptional regimes that facilitate the experimentation of technologies in a context of suspension of the legal framework in force. However, this picture can be nuanced. On a more general scale, we are witnessing a movement to regulate innovation, reflected in a series of laws such as the Data Protection Regulation (RGPD), the Digital Markets Act, the Artificial Intelligence Act, etc. These laws also affect humanitarian aid. Part of our thesis is therefore devoted to the work of data protection officers working in humanitarian NGOs. Part of our thesis is therefore devoted to the work of data protection officers attached to humanitarian NGOs. But we will also see that the latter is based on a compliance approach that is not without its limits. We will then look at a second dynamic which is contributing to increasing the risks associated with the digitisation of the international solidarity sector. In short, it concerns the shrinking of humanitarian space, linked to the exercise of state sovereignty, and its translation into informational and digital space. Firstly, we will look at how data exchanges between NGOs and host countries are perceived and regulated. These exchanges can be seen as legitimate, but also as a risk factor, particularly if they are associated with forms of state violence and the criminalisation of aid beneficiaries. Secondly, we will take into account the fact that the digitisation of our societies also accompanies and reinforces a long-term phenomenon of recompositions of sovereignty. This phenomenon is also linked to the entry onto the scene of a series of non-state actors, obviously companies such as the GAFAMs, but also other more informal groups such as hackers. The involvement of cybercombatants in contemporary conflicts is part of a long movement to challenge the State's monopoly on violence as a result of the proliferation of intra-State conflicts - against terrorist groups, for example
Robitaille, Marie-Chantal. "Quels ont été les stratégies d’influence et le discours de l’industrie agroalimentaire au cours de l’élaboration du nouveau Guide alimentaire canadien?" Thesis, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/24484.
Texto completoIn Canada, the study of the agri-food industry’s behavior and its associated repercussions on the health of the populations it serves remains relatively unexplored. However, previous studies have shown that private sector stakeholders employ diverse strategies to influence the development of public policy. These strategies may compromise the nature and implementation of food and nutrition policies. The objectives of this research, based on the revision process of Canada’s Food Guide (CFG) aim to: (1) identify the corporate political activity (CPA) undertaken by the agri-food industry during the revision process of Canada’s Food Guide (CFG) from 2016 to 2019, and (2) analyze the position and discourse of key industry actors concerning the recommendations proposed by Health Canada. The sample is composed of eleven agri-food industry stakeholders having submitted a memorandum to the Standing Committee on Health in relation to the revision of CFG. A six- month data collection period, from October 2018 to March 2019, allowed us to identify CPAs undertaken by the sample over a 39-month period, from early autumn 2016 until spring of 2019. Materials analyzed include memoranda submitted to Cabinet as well as stakeholders’ official websites. To define the CPAs and classify them according to their strategies, their practices and the mechanisms employed, we relied upon a conceptual framework from the INFORMAS network. We then identified, within the CPAs and discourses, elements of citations indicating positioning in terms of the three guiding principles: A variety of nutritious foods and beverages are the foundation for healthy eating; Processed or prepared foods and beverages high in sodium, sugars or saturated fat undermine healthy eating; Knowledge and skills are needed to navigate the complex food environment and support healthy eating. A total of 366 CPAs were identified in relation to CFG. The primary strategies reported are information management (n=197) and discursive strategies (n=108). The data collected suggest that the agri-food industry is using CPAs to influence the policy making of the new CFG. Industry stakeholders have expressed an opposition to the new food guidelines. Each stakeholders’ point of view on the problems and solutions concerning the three guiding principles differ. The economic interests respective to each stakeholder shape the vision promoted by the food industry. This vision may be difficult to harmonize with multiple dimensions of the new guidelines, as well as with the most recent evidence supporting them. It is imperative to better document and regulate the agri-food industry’s CPAs which could interfere with the adoption of legislative measures and limit governmental capacity to develop healthy food and nutrition policies.