Transparency’s Trap: Problems of an Unquestioned Norm

In Stefan Berger & Dimitrij Owetschkin (eds.), Contested Transparencies, Social Movements and the Public Sphere: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives. Springer Verlag. pp. 35-54 (2019)
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Abstract

Starting with the observation that transparency has become a concept so familiar that one hardly ever stops to consider the presuppositions and consequences of its usage, the chapter analyses transparency demands as a specific way of exercising power. By doing so, the author shows that the intrinsic logic of transparency leads to paradoxical effects. Any attempts to realize complete transparency undermine its own preconditions. As Vogelmann argues, instead of providing more visibility and clarity, transparency makes its objects “invisible” and the intensification of transparency demands produces self-censorship. The chapter concludes that transparency claims undermine the distinction between the private and the public and threaten the individual autonomy.

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Frieder Vogelmann
University of Freiburg

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