From Monitoring to Control: How Surveillance Technologies Reshape Political Authority
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58840/yeps1x85Keywords:
Hybrid political systems, surveillance governance, democratic backsliding, state power, comparative authoritarianism, civil freedomsAbstract
This study explores how contemporary governments operating within hybrid political systems employ digital technologies to reshape state power and constrain democratic practice. Focusing on comparative cases from Turkey, Hungary, and India, the article analyzes the ways in which surveillance infrastructures are embedded into governance mechanisms to regulate political opposition, manage public discourse, and consolidate authority under the appearance of electoral legitimacy. Adopting a qualitative comparative design, the research draws on policy texts, legal instruments, human rights assessments, and interviews with regional experts. The analysis demonstrates that technologically enabled monitoring has become increasingly institutionalized, reinforced through formal legislation and populist narratives that frame surveillance as a tool of security and national interest. By revealing how digital governance mechanisms facilitate subtle yet systematic forms of political control, the study advances critical debates on democratic resilience and accountability in an era of expanding state surveillance.



