Tracking People
Wearable Technologies in Social and Public Policy
Herausgeber: Hucklesby, Anthea; Holt, Raymond
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Tracking People
Wearable Technologies in Social and Public Policy
Herausgeber: Hucklesby, Anthea; Holt, Raymond
- Broschiertes Buch
This book critically explores the ethical, legal, social, and technical issues arising from the use of wearable tagging and tracking devices in different domains, bringing together contributions from across Social Science, Engineering, Computer Science, Philosophy and Medicine to provide a unique and innovative collection.
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This book critically explores the ethical, legal, social, and technical issues arising from the use of wearable tagging and tracking devices in different domains, bringing together contributions from across Social Science, Engineering, Computer Science, Philosophy and Medicine to provide a unique and innovative collection.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 238
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. August 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 154mm x 234mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 404g
- ISBN-13: 9780367443580
- ISBN-10: 0367443589
- Artikelnr.: 68100695
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 238
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. August 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 154mm x 234mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 404g
- ISBN-13: 9780367443580
- ISBN-10: 0367443589
- Artikelnr.: 68100695
Anthea Hucklesby is Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Birmingham, UK where she holds a joint appointment in Birmingham Law School and the School of Social Policy. Raymond Holt is a Lecturer in Product Design at the School of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Leeds, UK.
1.Tracking people: an introduction Anthea Hucklesby and Raymond Holt 2.GPS
tracking in care settings: attending to the socio-material context of use
Joe Wherton, Trisha Greenhalgh, Sara Shaw, Rob Procter and Jay Shaw 3.
Using tracking technologies well: the contribution of the concepts of
'tightness' or 'grip' Anthea Hucklesby 4.Proportionality and monitoring:
penal vs care contexts Tom Sorell 5.'He's doing a hokey cokey': everyday
calculations and controversies of digitally mediated punishment in Scotland
Ryan Casey 6.Tracking in the interests of counter-terrorism Jessie
Blackbourn and Clive Walker 7.Smartphone electronic monitoring (EM),
Artificial Intelligence and the mass supervision question in the USA Mike
Nellis 8.Reducing opioid related deaths for individuals who are at high
risk of overdose: a co-production study Anne Campbell, Sharon Millen,
Amanda Taylor-Beswick and Li Guo 9.Using geolocation-based technologies for
monitoring people with severe mental illness Niels Peek, Paolo Fraccaro and
Sabine van der Veer 10.Tracking people and sociotechnical systems design
Raymond Holt 11.Apple AirTags as people trackers Neil McBride
tracking in care settings: attending to the socio-material context of use
Joe Wherton, Trisha Greenhalgh, Sara Shaw, Rob Procter and Jay Shaw 3.
Using tracking technologies well: the contribution of the concepts of
'tightness' or 'grip' Anthea Hucklesby 4.Proportionality and monitoring:
penal vs care contexts Tom Sorell 5.'He's doing a hokey cokey': everyday
calculations and controversies of digitally mediated punishment in Scotland
Ryan Casey 6.Tracking in the interests of counter-terrorism Jessie
Blackbourn and Clive Walker 7.Smartphone electronic monitoring (EM),
Artificial Intelligence and the mass supervision question in the USA Mike
Nellis 8.Reducing opioid related deaths for individuals who are at high
risk of overdose: a co-production study Anne Campbell, Sharon Millen,
Amanda Taylor-Beswick and Li Guo 9.Using geolocation-based technologies for
monitoring people with severe mental illness Niels Peek, Paolo Fraccaro and
Sabine van der Veer 10.Tracking people and sociotechnical systems design
Raymond Holt 11.Apple AirTags as people trackers Neil McBride
1.Tracking people: an introduction Anthea Hucklesby and Raymond Holt 2.GPS
tracking in care settings: attending to the socio-material context of use
Joe Wherton, Trisha Greenhalgh, Sara Shaw, Rob Procter and Jay Shaw 3.
Using tracking technologies well: the contribution of the concepts of
'tightness' or 'grip' Anthea Hucklesby 4.Proportionality and monitoring:
penal vs care contexts Tom Sorell 5.'He's doing a hokey cokey': everyday
calculations and controversies of digitally mediated punishment in Scotland
Ryan Casey 6.Tracking in the interests of counter-terrorism Jessie
Blackbourn and Clive Walker 7.Smartphone electronic monitoring (EM),
Artificial Intelligence and the mass supervision question in the USA Mike
Nellis 8.Reducing opioid related deaths for individuals who are at high
risk of overdose: a co-production study Anne Campbell, Sharon Millen,
Amanda Taylor-Beswick and Li Guo 9.Using geolocation-based technologies for
monitoring people with severe mental illness Niels Peek, Paolo Fraccaro and
Sabine van der Veer 10.Tracking people and sociotechnical systems design
Raymond Holt 11.Apple AirTags as people trackers Neil McBride
tracking in care settings: attending to the socio-material context of use
Joe Wherton, Trisha Greenhalgh, Sara Shaw, Rob Procter and Jay Shaw 3.
Using tracking technologies well: the contribution of the concepts of
'tightness' or 'grip' Anthea Hucklesby 4.Proportionality and monitoring:
penal vs care contexts Tom Sorell 5.'He's doing a hokey cokey': everyday
calculations and controversies of digitally mediated punishment in Scotland
Ryan Casey 6.Tracking in the interests of counter-terrorism Jessie
Blackbourn and Clive Walker 7.Smartphone electronic monitoring (EM),
Artificial Intelligence and the mass supervision question in the USA Mike
Nellis 8.Reducing opioid related deaths for individuals who are at high
risk of overdose: a co-production study Anne Campbell, Sharon Millen,
Amanda Taylor-Beswick and Li Guo 9.Using geolocation-based technologies for
monitoring people with severe mental illness Niels Peek, Paolo Fraccaro and
Sabine van der Veer 10.Tracking people and sociotechnical systems design
Raymond Holt 11.Apple AirTags as people trackers Neil McBride