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surveillance

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surveillance

close observation or supervision maintained over a person, group, etc., esp one in custody or under suspicion
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

surveillance

the monitoring, and the associated direct or indirect forms of supervision and superintendence by the modern STATE, of the activities of its citizens. The capacity for surveillance possessed by modern NATION STATES has increased compared with those available to earlier forms of state, as the result of spectacular improvements in techniques for the collection and storage of INFORMATION and equally striking improvements in means of transport and communications.

For FOUCAULT, in Discipline and Punish (1975), the ‘disciplinary power’ of modern societies is an all-pervasive feature of these societies and a predominant feature of administrative power within them. Remedial and CARCERAL ORGANIZATIONS, which remove human liberty are not more than extreme forms of a generalized tendency to heightened surveillance within these societies.

Foucault's emphasis is disputed by many however. Our heightened awareness of, and concern about, situations in which some individuals are subject to loss of liberty reflects the new importance of a concern for liberty within modern societies and the many areas of life in which liberties have increased. Nonetheless, few dispute that – for good and for ill – surveillance and control are an important characteristic of modern societies and the modern state. Compare ORIENTAL DESPOTISM, ABSOLUTISM. See also SEQUESTRATION, TOTALITARIANISM.

Collins Dictionary of Sociology, 3rd ed. © HarperCollins Publishers 2000

surveillance

[sər′vā·ləns]
(engineering)
Systematic observation of air, surface, or subsurface areas or volumes by visual, electronic, photographic, or other means, for intelligence or other purposes.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

surveillance

The systematic observation of airspace, surface or subsurface areas, places, persons, or things, by visual, aural, electronic, photographic, or other means.
An Illustrated Dictionary of Aviation Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

surveillance

Monitoring people's actions and behavior either via camera or by tracking financial transactions. Surveillance is performed by governments for the protection of its people such as detecting criminals or for the preservation of an authoritarian administration. See connected camera, CCTV, network camera, facial recognition and sousveillance.
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References in periodicals archive
The existence of a National Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention Program to support immunization programs in performing active identification of infants born to women infected by hepatitis B virus (HBV) provided an opportunity to compare the number of HBV-infected infants identified actively through the immunization programs with the number of HBV-infected infants identified passively through communicable disease surveillance. More infants were identified through active identification by the immunization programs than by passive communicable disease surveillance; however, gaps were observed in reporting by both programs and disease surveillance.
Four states reported having source code of the general communicable disease surveillance system available to the general public for use or modification from its original design free of charge and were willing to share state written code with any interested state or local health departments.
Based on the results of this study, the second phase of this project, construction of the animal disease surveillance portion of Michigan's reporting system, will be implemented with continued input from local, state, and federal stakeholders.
"Disease surveillance is a critical service for the livestock industry, and it is vital that it is not weakened through this rationalisation.
The bureau must issue the official list of an institutionalized public health information system, disease surveillance, and response systems for mandatory reporting of the diseases and public health events.
The workshop further trains the participants on foodborne outbreak detection by studying cases as hypothetical examples, and calls for holding official meeting of the laboratory Pulse Net Middle East Foodborne Disease Surveillance Network committee.
The provincial Disease Surveillance and Response Centre at DGHS Lahore will be further equipped to optimally support the district teams in the advent of an outbreak', said Dr Haroon Jahangir, Director General Health Services Punjab.
He stated that in the health sector, the key initiatives to widen the coverage of health care spending and achieve health targets include increase in the number of paramedical staff, expansion of lady health workers programme, strengthening of primary healthcare with backup of skilled personnel including women, medical officers in basic health units, establishment of health emergency surveillance and response system, implementation of a national plan for vaccination and establishing a health information and disease surveillance system.
But Meru County Health Executive Meshack Mutuma, who led a team of medics including disease surveillance officers, veterinary doctors and health officers as well as police officers in addressing journalists, said the situation has been contained.Dr Geoffrey Koome, a medical officer from Tigania East Sub-County, said while results for tests sent to the Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri) are not yet out, they are convinced that the patients are suffering from cutaneous anthrax.
The committee was constituted after the 'Disease Surveillance System' of the Punjab Information and Technology Board (PITB) reported the presence of the suspected patients of these two viral diseases in the Government Nawaz Sharif Yakki Gate Hospital, Lahore.
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