Abstract
While internet privacy is a growing concern, there has been little social scientific work on how cyberstalking intersects with rising rates of domestic violence. New personal and easily accessible surveillance devices and software will change social life, and not always for the better. Feminist activism has a role to play in this space.
A rethinking of the relationship between technology and violence must extend to feminist theorising on digital cultures and the experience of gender, sex and power online. Established cybersafety campaigns tend to locate the problem with the victim rather than the perpetrator, assuming that in cyberspace, as in the physical world, women are responsible for reducing the risk of being attacked (rather than unpacking the power relations that sustain domestic and sexual violence in the first place).
A comprehensive understanding of (post)modern technology violence in contemporary social life must include a review of the use and misuse of internet enabled technologies between intimate partners. Effective intervention needs to address these concerns in socio-political contexts and in electronic, as well as physical, spaces. The interconnection between ‘private’ problems and wider political and social structures, can be used to address the systematic nature of domestic nature in contemporary Australian culture. Poststructuralist feminist understandings of the complex and contradictory nature of gender, sex and power in an information society have a lot to offer. Education programs need to move beyond a simplistic ‘skills’ development model, to consider the connections between gender, technology, power and technologies of power in the 21st century.