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In Minority Report , Precrime imprisons people for crimes they would have committed had they not been prevented. With Philip K. Dick as inspiration, the authors posit that developments in Canadian law indicate a trend toward imposing punishments at earlier stages of the prosecutorial process. As risk management logics shift to precautionary ones, the law has responded by developing criminal regulation techniques in light of the "war on terror": the need to ensure security, the proliferation of digital data, and the design of drones, social networking, and cloud storage to gather data. The book…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In Minority Report, Precrime imprisons people for crimes they would have committed had they not been prevented. With Philip K. Dick as inspiration, the authors posit that developments in Canadian law indicate a trend toward imposing punishments at earlier stages of the prosecutorial process. As risk management logics shift to precautionary ones, the law has responded by developing criminal regulation techniques in light of the "war on terror": the need to ensure security, the proliferation of digital data, and the design of drones, social networking, and cloud storage to gather data. The book is a provocative read for scholars and students in criminal law, policing, and surveillance.


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Autorenporträt
Richard Jochelson is an associate professor on the Faculty of Law at the University of Manitoba and holds his Ph.D. in Law from Osgoode Hall Law School at York University, a Masters in Law from University of Toronto Law School, and a Law Degree from University of Calgary Law School (Gold Medal). A former law clerk, he worked for ten years teaching criminal and constitutional law at the University of Winnipeg prior to joining Robson Hall. Jochelson is a member of the Bar of Manitoba, a co-applicant on several Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) awards, and has co-authored and co-edited several peer-reviewed articles and books, including The Disappearance of Criminal Law: Police Powers and the Supreme Court.

James Gacek is a doctoral candidate at Edinburgh Law School, University of Edinburgh. He has lectured in criminology and criminal justice at the University of Manitoba and the University of Winnipeg. Situated within broader research interests in prison sociology, critical criminology, and carceral geography, his Ph.D. research focuses upon the socio-legal and geographical relationship between criminalized people and the territorial stigmatization of marginalized neighborhoods in Canada. Gacek is an American Sociological Association Paper Award winner (2014).

Lauren Menzie is a graduate student in the Department of Law and Legal Studies at Carleton University. She is working as a section instructor in the Department of Law and Legal Studies at Carleton. Her research interests are centered on the evolution of Canadian criminal law and governance, including the legal regulation of sex and criminal law's emergence into the realm of administrative civil processes. Her research examines the regulation of nonconsensual sexual interaction, the social and legal discourses surrounding consent, and how law denunciates certain expressions of sexuality.

With contributions from:

Kirsten Kramar teaches in the Department of Sociology at the University of Calgary. She is a notable law and society scholar. She has published several academic books and monographs dealing with sexuality and the law, moral regulation, and the law of infanticide. She is also widely published in the area of the law of policing. She was a Professor of Sociology at the University of Winnipeg for eleven years prior to moving to Calgary. She is a winner of multiple SSHRC grants and a notable expert in the area of forensic evidence in cases of infanticide.