Monahan worked as an Assistant Professor in the School of Justice and Social Inquiry at Arizona State University from 2003 to 2008. He moved to Vanderbilt University in 2008, where he was an Associate Professor of Human and Organizational Development and Associate Professor of Medicine from 2008 to 2012.[5][7] He began as an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2013 and has been Professor at the same institution since 2015.[5] Additionally, from 2015 to 2020 Monahan served as a director of the international Surveillance Studies Network, which is the primary professional academic association dedicated to the critical study of surveillance.[5][8]
Research
Monahan’s research focuses on institutional and cultural transformations with new technologies, with a particular emphasis on surveillance and security programs.[2][9][10] He has written on Department of Homeland Security data fusion centers,[4][11] surveillance and inequality in schools,[12] managerial supervision with hospital tracking systems,[13][14] racial violence,[15][16] and artistic modes of resistance to state surveillance.[17][18] He has served as Principal Investigator on several National Science Foundation-funded grants, including the Platform Mediation research project studying the ways that cities contend with platforms like Uber and Airbnb.[19][20]
Reception
Monahan’s book Surveillance in the Time of Insecurity received the 2011 Surveillance Studies Book Prize from the Surveillance Studies Network for the world's best English language book published on the topic of surveillance.[21] His book Crisis Vision received honorable mention for the 2023 Surveillance Studies Book Prize.[22]
Selected works
Monahan, Torin. Globalization, Technological Change, and Public Education. Routledge (2005).[23]
Monahan, Torin. (Ed.) Surveillance and Security: Technological Politics and Power in Everyday Life. Routledge (2006).[24]
Monahan, Torin, and Rodolfo D. Torres (Eds.) Schools under Surveillance: Cultures of Control in Public Education. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press (2010).[12]
Monahan, Torin. Surveillance in the Time of Insecurity. Rutgers University Press (2010).[25]
Gilliom, John, and Torin Monahan. SuperVision: An Introduction to the Surveillance Society. University of Chicago Press (2013).[26]
Monahan, Torin, and David Murakami Wood. (Eds.) Surveillance Studies: A Reader. Oxford University Press (2018).[27]
Monahan, Torin. Crisis Vision: Race and the Cultural Production of Surveillance. Duke University Press (2022).[28]
^Monahan, Torin; Regan, Priscilla M. (2012). "Zones of Opacity: Data Fusion in Post-9/11 Security Organizations". Canadian Journal of Law and Society. 27 (3): 301–317. doi:10.1017/S0829320100010528. S2CID143914114.
^Fisher, Jill A.; Monahan, Torin (2008). "Tracking the Social Dimensions of Rfid Systems in Hospitals". International Journal of Medical Informatics. 77 (3): 176–183. doi:10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2007.04.010. PMID17544841.
^Monahan, Torin (2020). "The Arresting Gaze: Artistic Disruptions of Antiblack Surveillance". International Journal of Cultural Studies. 23 (4): 564–581. doi:10.1177/1367877920901859. S2CID216278546.
^Monahan, Torin (2015). "The Right to Hide? Anti-Surveillance Camouflage and the Aestheticization of Resistance". Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies. 12 (2): 159–178. doi:10.1080/14791420.2015.1006646. S2CID73544749.
^Monahan, Torin (2018). "Ways of Being Seen: Surveillance Art and the Interpellation of Viewing Subjects". Cultural Studies. 32 (4): 560–581. doi:10.1080/09502386.2017.1374424. S2CID149016146.