Kevin Haggerty, New Transparency co-investigator, was one of just five Canadian researchers to receive the 2014 Killam Research Fellowship. He plans to outline the factors that allowed broad surveillance to be part of everyday life.
See: http://news.ualberta.ca/newsarticles/2014/march/keeping-a-close-eye-on-surveillance-creep
See also:
http://canadacouncil.ca/en/council/news-room/news/2014/killam-fellowships
http://killamprogram.canadacouncil.ca/fellowship-members-2014/kevin-haggerty
The two-year, $140,000 prize grants teaching and administrative release to scholars who are engaged in research projects of outstanding merit and widespread interest, so they may pursue independent research.
Haggerty intends to use the fellowship to write a book aimed at a popular audience that attempts to outline the factors that allowed broad surveillance to become a part of everyday life.
- See more at: http://news.ualberta.ca/newsarticles/2014/march/keeping-a-close-eye-on-s...
The two-year, $140,000 prize grants teaching and administrative release to scholars who are engaged in research projects of outstanding merit and widespread interest, so they may pursue independent research.
Haggerty intends to use the fellowship to write a book aimed at a popular audience that attempts to outline the factors that allowed broad surveillance to become a part of everyday life.
- See more at: http://news.ualberta.ca/newsarticles/2014/march/keeping-a-close-eye-on-s...