Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Policing at a distance and that human thing

View through CrossRef
Policing technologies are increasingly being developed to surveil and control people from afar. This is especially true in relation to cross-border crimes and other global threats where the necessity of monitoring such illegal flows is often advocated. In the literature, this is sometimes referred to as “policing at a distance,” signifying how the growth in different policing technologies is allowing police to oversee people without coming into physical contact with them. Overall, scholars find this development alarming. It is alarming because it reduces human lives to data points and because studies have shown how policing at a distance may trigger hateful police attitudes. With these problems of policing at a distance in mind, this article explores how an increasing use of surveillance technologies affects Danish detectives.
Berghahn Books
Title: Policing at a distance and that human thing
Description:
Policing technologies are increasingly being developed to surveil and control people from afar.
This is especially true in relation to cross-border crimes and other global threats where the necessity of monitoring such illegal flows is often advocated.
In the literature, this is sometimes referred to as “policing at a distance,” signifying how the growth in different policing technologies is allowing police to oversee people without coming into physical contact with them.
Overall, scholars find this development alarming.
It is alarming because it reduces human lives to data points and because studies have shown how policing at a distance may trigger hateful police attitudes.
With these problems of policing at a distance in mind, this article explores how an increasing use of surveillance technologies affects Danish detectives.

Related Results

Legitimacy in Policing: A Systematic Review
Legitimacy in Policing: A Systematic Review
This Campbell systematic review assesses the direct and indirect benefits of public police interventions that use procedurally just dialogue. The review summarises findings from 30...
Thing Theory
Thing Theory
Thing theory names an approach that scholars use to investigate human-object relations in art, literature, culture, and everyday life. Though commonly thought of as a way to study ...
Czar Cullen: Police Commissioner John Cullen and Coercive State Action in Early 20th Century NZ
Czar Cullen: Police Commissioner John Cullen and Coercive State Action in Early 20th Century NZ
<p>Given the central and inherently contested role of policing in the modern state, it is striking to note the generally limited historical interest in the place of policing ...
Chinese Policing in a Time of Transition, 1978-2008
Chinese Policing in a Time of Transition, 1978-2008
This article examines the development of policing in China over several historical periods. It consists of three major parts. The first section provides a brief historical review o...
Social Work and Policing
Social Work and Policing
Policing, like social work, is a complex term with multiple meanings. Focusing on the unique context of the United States, this article provides an overview of policing, police and...
Online Education
Online Education
Online education is considered the latest generation in the practice of distance education. As described by professionals in the field, distance education is a form of teaching and...
Policing Juveniles
Policing Juveniles
AbstractThe historic experience of the police and juveniles parallels that of the emergence and development of the juvenile court and juvenile justice system. Just as the juvenile ...
Policing Protest
Policing Protest
In Policing Protest Paul A. Passavant explores how the policing of protest in the United States has become increasingly hostile since the late 1990s, moving away from strategies th...

Back to Top