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Secrecy and new technologies

Jérôme Bindé (Jérôme Bindé is Deputy Assistant Director‐General for Social and Human Sciences and Director of the Division of Foresight, Philosophy and Human Sciences at Unesco (e‐mail: j.binde@Unesco.org), Secretary‐General of the Council of the Future, Member of the Club of Rome and co‐ordinator of the 21st Century Talks series. Principal co‐author of the forward‐looking World Report The World Ahead: Our Future in the Making (Zed Books/Unesco Publishing, 2001), and editor of Keys to the Twenty‐first Century (Berghahn Books/Unesco Publishing, 2001) and The Future of Values (Berghahn Books/Unesco Publishing, 2004).)

Foresight

ISSN: 1463-6689

Article publication date: 1 October 2005

544

Abstract

Purpose

Aims to explore a central contradiction in the so‐called information society – while it is characterized by calls for universal transparency, at the same time, there are demands for increased secrecy.

Design/methodology/approach

A number of lines of enquiry are sketched out including: the way in which new technologies radically reshapes the relationship between secrecy and both the public and professional spheres; transparency v. secrecy; and the prospect that a society of organized secrecy will take the place of democratic society.

Findings

New norms and rules should be defined so as to take into account the effects of information technologies on governance and human rights.

Originality/value

The article is a declaration that the Age of the Enlightenment, as with the open society, is incapable of being bounded. The author opposes the postmodern prophets of doom who have declared the Age of the Enlightenment to be dead and its democratic project to be nonsensical.

Keywords

Citation

Bindé, J. (2005), "Secrecy and new technologies", Foresight, Vol. 7 No. 5, pp. 3-7. https://doi.org/10.1108/14636680510700562

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2005, Company

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