
Sensing Environmental Danger in the City
Author(s) -
Torin Monahan,
Jennifer T. Mokos
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
international review of information ethics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2563-5638
DOI - 10.29173/irie265
Subject(s) - structuring , risk analysis (engineering) , environmental planning , root cause , computer security , internet privacy , water contamination , public health , function (biology) , root (linguistics) , business , computer science , engineering , contamination , environmental science , medicine , operations management , ecology , nursing , finance , evolutionary biology , biology , linguistics , philosophy
In this paper, we identify and discuss some of the ethical problems associated with digital sensors used to detect water contamination and air pollution in the United States. Such safety devices are often deployed unsystematically and with questionable efficacy, thereby structuring the life chances of people in unequal ways. Whereas most technological infrastructures are hidden from view – or at least from active awareness – until they cease to function, those infrastructures meant to monitor and/or regulate largely ?invisible? public health dangers resist public awareness even when they fail. Because such detection systems tend to individualize responsibility for reducing risk, the systems may normalize and perhaps exacerbate root problems of contamination and unequal exposure. One ethical challenge is to render such systems and their failures legible.