Organizational tensions arising from mandatory data exchange between the private and public sector: The case of financial services

Kirstie Ball, Ana Canhoto*, Elizabeth Daniel, Sally Dibb, Maureen Meadows, Keith Spiller

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    4 Citations (SciVal)
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number119996
    JournalTechnological Forecasting and Social Change
    Volume155
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished (VoR) - Jun 2020

    Funding

    Kirstie Ball is Professor in Management at the University of St Andrews where she is director and founder of CRISP, the center for Research into Information, Surveillance and Privacy. She is Research Fellow at the Surveillance Studies centre, Queen's University, Canada and Visiting Professor at the centre for Business in Society at Coventry University. Her research focuses on surveillance in and around organizations and her work has been funded by ESRC , EPSRC , SSHRC (Canada), The Leverhulme Trust and the European Framework Programme. She co-edits the Routledge Studies in Surveillance book series and co-founded the journal Surveillance and Society. Sally Dibb is Professor of Marketing and Society at Coventry University. She has visiting posts at The Open University, Warwick Business School and University of St Andrews. Her research focuses on the role of data in addressing societal challenges and supporting strategic decision making. Sally has received funding from the ESRC, InnovateUK, European FP7 and EU KIC programmes, The Leverhulme Trust, Academic of Marketing, amongst others. She has served twice as a panel member for the UK Research Excellence Framework and as international panel member for the Norwegian Research Council.

    Keywords

    • Anti-money laundering
    • Counter-terrorist finance
    • Data exchange mechanisms
    • Financial services
    • Multi-level analysis
    • Remediation
    • information flows

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