This article explores the emergence of a pervasive system of social control in contemporary networked societies, termed the “punitive mesh.” Building on the dispersal of penal power and surveillance dynamics theorized by Foucault, Deleuze, Cohen, and Zuboff, the punitive mesh captures how punishment and reputational judgment extend beyond formal institutions, circulating laterally and diffusely through digital infrastructures. It encompasses persistent digital traces, public criminal records, informal review platforms, and viral social media content, where ordinary users both administer and experience sanctions. Within this landscape, the boundaries between the punisher and the punished, public and private, and formal and informal authority are blurred, and social participation itself becomes a mechanism of enforcement. The article examines how these dynamics enable participatory punishment, through which reputational harm is produced, amplified, and perpetuated via collective engagement rather than official sanctions. By analyzing the interplay of exposure, circulation, and persistence across online networks, the punitive mesh reveals how social control is continuous, decentralized, and mutually enforced. This framework highlights the challenges posed by networked sanctioning for justice, privacy, and social life, showing that punishment is no longer episodic or institutionally contained but embedded within the infrastructure of everyday digital interaction.
Alessandro Corda (Tue,) studied this question.