Digitalisation, Surveillance and Power: A Sociological Reading of the Contemporary Indian State

Digitalisation, Surveillance and Power: A Sociological Reading of the Contemporary Indian State

Digitalisation, Surveillance and Power: A Sociological Reading of the Contemporary Indian State

(Relevant for Sociology Paper I and II)

Introduction

The rapid expansion of digital technologies has fundamentally transformed the relationship between the state, market, and society. From biometric identification and digital welfare delivery to online education, digital payments, and algorithmic governance, India is witnessing an unprecedented phase of digital transformation. While digitalisation promises efficiency, transparency, and inclusion, it also raises critical concerns regarding privacy, surveillance, exclusion, and power.

Digitalisation as a Social Process

Digitalisation refers to the integration of digital technologies into governance, economy, and everyday life. Sociologically, it represents:

  • Rationalisation of social processes
  • Transformation of institutional functioning
  • Reconfiguration of power relations

Max Weber’s idea of rationalisation is particularly relevant. Digital governance embodies:

  • Efficiency
  • Predictability
  • Calculability
  • Control

However, Weber also warned that excessive rationalisation could trap individuals in an “iron cage”, limiting autonomy and human agency.

The Digital Indian State: Current Context

In recent years, India has expanded:

  • Digital identity systems
  • Online welfare delivery
  • Digital taxation and compliance
  • E-governance platforms

These developments aim to reduce corruption, eliminate intermediaries, and enhance administrative efficiency. Yet, sociologically, they signal the emergence of a digitally mediated state, where governance increasingly operates through data, algorithms, and surveillance mechanisms.

Michel Foucault: Surveillance and Discipline

Michel Foucault’s concept of disciplinary power offers deep insights into digital governance. According to Foucault:

  • Modern power operates through surveillance rather than force
  • Individuals internalise discipline through constant visibility

Digital systems function like a panopticon:

  • Citizens are continuously recorded, monitored, and assessed
  • Surveillance becomes invisible and normalised
  • Compliance is produced through self-regulation

In digital governance, power becomes diffuse, impersonal, and automated, reducing opportunities for resistance.

Data, Knowledge and Power

Foucault argued that knowledge and power are inseparable. In the digital age:

  • Data becomes a key source of power
  • Algorithms classify, rank, and evaluate individuals
  • Decisions increasingly rely on data-driven logic

This raises critical sociological questions:

  • Who controls data?
  • Whose knowledge is legitimised?
  • Who is excluded from digital systems?

The digital divide ensures that data power remains concentrated among the state and corporate actors, marginalising vulnerable populations.

Digitalisation and Social Inequality

The Digital Divide

Despite claims of inclusivity, digitalisation often reproduces existing inequalities. Access to digital resources varies by:

  • Class
  • Caste
  • Gender
  • Region

Urban, educated populations benefit disproportionately from digital services, while rural, elderly, and marginalised communities face barriers such as:

  • Lack of internet access
  • Low digital literacy
  • Language constraints

This reinforces structural inequality, rather than eliminating it.

Pierre Bourdieu and Digital Capital

Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of capital helps explain digital inequality:

  • Economic capital: Ability to afford devices and connectivity
  • Cultural capital: Digital literacy and language proficiency
  • Social capital: Networks that facilitate access

Digital capital becomes a new form of advantage, enabling certain groups to convert technological access into social mobility.

Digital Labour and Platform Economy

Changing Nature of Work

Digitalisation has transformed labour through:

  • Gig platforms
  • Remote work
  • Algorithmic management

While digital platforms promise flexibility, they often result in:

  • Precarious employment
  • Lack of social security
  • Weak collective bargaining

From a Marxian perspective, platform capitalism intensifies exploitation by:

  • Fragmenting labour
  • Obscuring employer accountability
  • Maximising surplus extraction

Workers become data points evaluated by ratings and algorithms rather than human supervisors.

Alienation in the Digital Age

Marx’s concept of alienation remains relevant:

  • Workers lack control over work conditions
  • Labour is reduced to task completion
  • Human interaction is replaced by digital interfaces

Digital labour thus represents a new form of alienation under advanced capitalism.

Digital Citizenship and Exclusion

Digitalisation reshapes the idea of citizenship itself. Access to rights and services increasingly depends on:

  • Digital authentication
  • Online registration
  • Biometric verification

This creates a form of conditional citizenship, where individuals without digital access risk exclusion from:

  • Welfare schemes
  • Healthcare
  • Education

T.H. Marshall’s concept of social citizenship is challenged, as technological barriers undermine universal access to rights.

Gender and Digitalisation

Gendered Digital Divide

Women face disproportionate barriers to digital access due to:

  • Lower device ownership
  • Social norms restricting technology use
  • Unequal education

As a result, digitalisation can deepen gender inequality, limiting women’s access to information, employment, and public participation.

Feminist Sociological Perspective

Feminist scholars argue that technology is not neutral. Digital systems often reflect:

  • Patriarchal biases
  • Male-centric design
  • Unequal labour expectations

While digital platforms provide opportunities for women’s employment, they also reinforce unpaid care burdens and informal work arrangements.

Surveillance, Privacy and Democracy

Surveillance State Concerns

The expansion of digital surveillance raises serious concerns about:

  • Privacy erosion
  • Data misuse
  • Democratic accountability

Zygmunt Bauman’s concept of liquid surveillance explains how monitoring becomes continuous, flexible, and pervasive in modern societies.

Surveillance no longer relies on coercion but on convenience and consent, making resistance difficult.

Impact on Democratic Participation

Digital surveillance may:

  • Chill dissent
  • Encourage self-censorship
  • Weaken civil liberties

This raises questions about the balance between security and freedom, a central concern in sociological debates on modern governance.

Network Society and Power

Manuel Castells describes contemporary society as a network society, where power flows through information networks rather than traditional hierarchies.

In this context:

  • States govern through digital platforms
  • Corporations control data infrastructures
  • Citizens become nodes in networks

Power becomes decentralised yet concentrated, operating through control over networks and information flows.

Digital Resistance and Agency

Despite concerns, digitalisation also enables resistance:

  • Online activism
  • Digital communities
  • Alternative media platforms

Social movements increasingly use digital tools for mobilisation, visibility, and coordination. However, digital activism also risks:

  • Superficial engagement
  • Surveillance exposure
  • Fragmentation of movements

Thus, digital space is both a site of control and contestation.

Conclusion

Digitalisation is reshaping Indian society in profound ways. While it enhances efficiency and connectivity, it also:

  • Reinforces inequality
  • Expands surveillance
  • Transforms citizenship and labour

Sociology helps us move beyond techno-optimism and critically examine who controls technology, who benefits, and who is excluded. The challenge for contemporary society is not to reject digitalisation, but to ensure that it operates within a framework of social justice, democratic accountability, and human dignity.

To Read more topicsvisit: www.triumphias.com/blogs

Read more Blogs:

Economy and Inflation: Navigating Uncertainty in a Changing Global Order

A World at a Crossroads: India and Global Developments Shaping January 2026

One comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *