Police on Camera (eBook, ePUB)
Surveillance, Privacy, and Accountability
Redaktion: Newell, Bryce Clayton
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Police on Camera (eBook, ePUB)
Surveillance, Privacy, and Accountability
Redaktion: Newell, Bryce Clayton
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Police on Camera address the conceptual and empirical evidence surrounding the use of BWCs by police officers in societies around the globe, offering a variety of differing opinions from experts in the field.
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Police on Camera address the conceptual and empirical evidence surrounding the use of BWCs by police officers in societies around the globe, offering a variety of differing opinions from experts in the field.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 282
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Oktober 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429800962
- Artikelnr.: 60119315
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 282
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Oktober 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429800962
- Artikelnr.: 60119315
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Bryce Clayton Newell is an Assistant Professor in the School of Journalism and Communication at the University of Oregon. His books include Surveillance, Privacy and Public Space (2019) and Privacy in Public Space (2017; both with Tjerk Timan & Bert-Jaap Koops).
Introduction: The Ayes Have It-Should They? Police Body-Worn Cameras
Section 1: Setting the Stage: Theory and Practice
1. Taking Off the Blinders: A General Framework to Understand How Bodycams Work
2. Theorizing Police Body-Worn Cameras
3. Reading the Body-Worn Camera as Multiple: A Reconsideration of Entities as Enactments
Section 2: Accountability and Discretion
4. Can We Count on the Police? Definitional Issues in Considering the Promise of Body Worn Cameras to Increase Police Accountability
5. The Camera Never Lies? Police Body Worn Cameras and Operational Discretion
6. Does Surveillance of Officers Lead to De-Policing? A Block Randomized Crossover Controlled Trial on Body-Worn Cameras in Uruguay
7. Police Body-Worn Cameras in the Canadian Context: Policing's New Visibility and Today's Expectations for Police Accountability
8. Commentary: Accountability, Discretion, and the Questions We Ask
9. Commentary: Questioning Assumptions of De-Policing and Erasures of Race: A Rejoinder to Ariel's Study of Camera-Induced Passivity Among Traffic Police in Uruguay
Section 3: Privacy and Surveillance
10. Not Just about Privacy: Police Body-Worn Cameras and the Costs of Public Area Surveillance
11. Privacy, Public Disclosure, and Police-Worn Body Camera Footage
12. The Rise of Body-Worn Video Cameras: A New Surveillance Revolution?
13. Commentary: A Republican and Collective Approach to the Privacy and Surveillance Issues of Bodycams
14. Commentary: Protecting the Rights of Citizens on Camera: Why Restricting Disclosure of Police Body Camera Footage is Better than Giving Victims Control over Recording
Conclusion: Body Worn Cameras, Surveillance, and Police Legitimacy
Section 1: Setting the Stage: Theory and Practice
1. Taking Off the Blinders: A General Framework to Understand How Bodycams Work
2. Theorizing Police Body-Worn Cameras
3. Reading the Body-Worn Camera as Multiple: A Reconsideration of Entities as Enactments
Section 2: Accountability and Discretion
4. Can We Count on the Police? Definitional Issues in Considering the Promise of Body Worn Cameras to Increase Police Accountability
5. The Camera Never Lies? Police Body Worn Cameras and Operational Discretion
6. Does Surveillance of Officers Lead to De-Policing? A Block Randomized Crossover Controlled Trial on Body-Worn Cameras in Uruguay
7. Police Body-Worn Cameras in the Canadian Context: Policing's New Visibility and Today's Expectations for Police Accountability
8. Commentary: Accountability, Discretion, and the Questions We Ask
9. Commentary: Questioning Assumptions of De-Policing and Erasures of Race: A Rejoinder to Ariel's Study of Camera-Induced Passivity Among Traffic Police in Uruguay
Section 3: Privacy and Surveillance
10. Not Just about Privacy: Police Body-Worn Cameras and the Costs of Public Area Surveillance
11. Privacy, Public Disclosure, and Police-Worn Body Camera Footage
12. The Rise of Body-Worn Video Cameras: A New Surveillance Revolution?
13. Commentary: A Republican and Collective Approach to the Privacy and Surveillance Issues of Bodycams
14. Commentary: Protecting the Rights of Citizens on Camera: Why Restricting Disclosure of Police Body Camera Footage is Better than Giving Victims Control over Recording
Conclusion: Body Worn Cameras, Surveillance, and Police Legitimacy
Introduction: The Ayes Have It-Should They? Police Body-Worn Cameras
Section 1: Setting the Stage: Theory and Practice
1. Taking Off the Blinders: A General Framework to Understand How Bodycams Work
2. Theorizing Police Body-Worn Cameras
3. Reading the Body-Worn Camera as Multiple: A Reconsideration of Entities as Enactments
Section 2: Accountability and Discretion
4. Can We Count on the Police? Definitional Issues in Considering the Promise of Body Worn Cameras to Increase Police Accountability
5. The Camera Never Lies? Police Body Worn Cameras and Operational Discretion
6. Does Surveillance of Officers Lead to De-Policing? A Block Randomized Crossover Controlled Trial on Body-Worn Cameras in Uruguay
7. Police Body-Worn Cameras in the Canadian Context: Policing's New Visibility and Today's Expectations for Police Accountability
8. Commentary: Accountability, Discretion, and the Questions We Ask
9. Commentary: Questioning Assumptions of De-Policing and Erasures of Race: A Rejoinder to Ariel's Study of Camera-Induced Passivity Among Traffic Police in Uruguay
Section 3: Privacy and Surveillance
10. Not Just about Privacy: Police Body-Worn Cameras and the Costs of Public Area Surveillance
11. Privacy, Public Disclosure, and Police-Worn Body Camera Footage
12. The Rise of Body-Worn Video Cameras: A New Surveillance Revolution?
13. Commentary: A Republican and Collective Approach to the Privacy and Surveillance Issues of Bodycams
14. Commentary: Protecting the Rights of Citizens on Camera: Why Restricting Disclosure of Police Body Camera Footage is Better than Giving Victims Control over Recording
Conclusion: Body Worn Cameras, Surveillance, and Police Legitimacy
Section 1: Setting the Stage: Theory and Practice
1. Taking Off the Blinders: A General Framework to Understand How Bodycams Work
2. Theorizing Police Body-Worn Cameras
3. Reading the Body-Worn Camera as Multiple: A Reconsideration of Entities as Enactments
Section 2: Accountability and Discretion
4. Can We Count on the Police? Definitional Issues in Considering the Promise of Body Worn Cameras to Increase Police Accountability
5. The Camera Never Lies? Police Body Worn Cameras and Operational Discretion
6. Does Surveillance of Officers Lead to De-Policing? A Block Randomized Crossover Controlled Trial on Body-Worn Cameras in Uruguay
7. Police Body-Worn Cameras in the Canadian Context: Policing's New Visibility and Today's Expectations for Police Accountability
8. Commentary: Accountability, Discretion, and the Questions We Ask
9. Commentary: Questioning Assumptions of De-Policing and Erasures of Race: A Rejoinder to Ariel's Study of Camera-Induced Passivity Among Traffic Police in Uruguay
Section 3: Privacy and Surveillance
10. Not Just about Privacy: Police Body-Worn Cameras and the Costs of Public Area Surveillance
11. Privacy, Public Disclosure, and Police-Worn Body Camera Footage
12. The Rise of Body-Worn Video Cameras: A New Surveillance Revolution?
13. Commentary: A Republican and Collective Approach to the Privacy and Surveillance Issues of Bodycams
14. Commentary: Protecting the Rights of Citizens on Camera: Why Restricting Disclosure of Police Body Camera Footage is Better than Giving Victims Control over Recording
Conclusion: Body Worn Cameras, Surveillance, and Police Legitimacy