Zalnieriute on “Transparency-Washing” In The Digital Age

Monika Zalnieriute (University of New South Wales – Faculty of Law) has posted “”Transparency-Washing” In The Digital Age: A Corporate Agenda of Procedural Fetishism” (Critical Analysis of Law, 8(1) 2021, Forthcoming) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

Contemporary discourse on the regulation and governance of the digital environment has often focused on the procedural value of transparency. This article traces the prominence of the concept of transparency in contemporary regulatory debates to the corporate agenda of technology companies. Looking at the latest transparency initiatives of IBM, Google and Facebook, I introduce the concept of “transparency-washing,” whereby a focus on transparency acts as an obfuscation and redirection from more substantive and fundamental questions about the concentration of power, substantial policies and actions of technology behemoths. While the “ethics-washing” of the tech giants has become widely acknowledged, “transparency washing” presents a wider critique of corporate discourse and neoliberal governmentality based on procedural fetishism, which detracts from the questions of substantial accountability and obligations by diverting the attention to procedural micro-issues that have little chance of changing the political or legal status quo.