English

edit

Etymology

edit

From panoptic +‎ -ism.

Noun

edit

panopticism (uncountable)

  1. The state or quality of being panoptic; all-seeingness.
    • 2008, Ilan Kapoor, The Postcolonial Politics of Development, Routledge, →ISBN, page 69:
      I cannot help but follow such panopticism to its ultimate conclusion: a Nineteen Eighty-Four scenario.
    • 2012 March, Mary D. Fan, “Panopticism for Police: Structural Reform Bargaining and Police Regulation by Data-Driven Surveillance”, in Washington Law Review, volume 87, number 93, page 102:
      The goal of police panopticism is to minimize the severe costs of managing the police by leveraging data-driven surveillance from multiple institutional points and actors.
    • 2014, Clive Thompson, "Whose Life Is It Anyway?", BookForum, February/March 2014, page 12:
      Today's panopticism (in the West, at least) hasn't had anything like this effect, as Angwin notes, because it can be quite crude in displaying its own invasive footprints: You shop for cameras online, and then find yourself haunted for weeks by camera ads each time you visit a new website.