Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Policing The Risk Society
View through CrossRef
Abstract
In this provocative new book, Richard Ericson and Kevin Haggerty contend that the police have become information brokers to institutions such as insurance companies and health and welfare organizations that operate based on a knowledge of risk. In turn, these institutions influence the ways that police officers think and act. A critical review of existing research reveals the need to study police interaction with institutions as well as individuals. These institutions are part of an emerging "risk society" where knowledge of risk is used to control danger. The authors examine different aspects of police involvement; the use of surveillance technologies and the collection of data on securities, careers and different social, ethnic, age and gender groups. They conclude by looking at how police organizations have been forced to develop new communications rules and technologies to meet external demands for knowledge of risk. This is the first book in this field to include detailed evidence of some of the central tenets of the risk society. It also includes a sophisticated examination of the risk society theory that will advance readers' knowledge considerably. With this book, the authors revolutionize the study of policing, and their work will impact heavily on scholars in criminology, social theory, and communications as well as policing and the public.
Title: Policing The Risk Society
Description:
Abstract
In this provocative new book, Richard Ericson and Kevin Haggerty contend that the police have become information brokers to institutions such as insurance companies and health and welfare organizations that operate based on a knowledge of risk.
In turn, these institutions influence the ways that police officers think and act.
A critical review of existing research reveals the need to study police interaction with institutions as well as individuals.
These institutions are part of an emerging "risk society" where knowledge of risk is used to control danger.
The authors examine different aspects of police involvement; the use of surveillance technologies and the collection of data on securities, careers and different social, ethnic, age and gender groups.
They conclude by looking at how police organizations have been forced to develop new communications rules and technologies to meet external demands for knowledge of risk.
This is the first book in this field to include detailed evidence of some of the central tenets of the risk society.
It also includes a sophisticated examination of the risk society theory that will advance readers' knowledge considerably.
With this book, the authors revolutionize the study of policing, and their work will impact heavily on scholars in criminology, social theory, and communications as well as policing and the public.
Related Results
Electronic Community-Oriented Policing
Electronic Community-Oriented Policing
Hu and Lovrich introduce the "electronic community-oriented policing (E-COP)," concept to explore how social media can impact police strategies on improving and maintaining police-...
Policing Black Bodies
Policing Black Bodies
From Trayvon Martin to Freddie Gray, the stories of police violence against Black people are too often in the news. In Policing Black Bodies Angela J. Hattery and Earl Smith make a...
Stop Trying to Fix Policing
Stop Trying to Fix Policing
In Stop Trying to Fix Policing: Lessons Learned from the Front Lines of Black Liberation, Tony Gaskew guides readers through the phenomena of police abolition, using the cultural l...
Issues and Controversies in Policing Today
Issues and Controversies in Policing Today
Issues and Controversies in Policing Today by Johnny Nhan is a thought-provoking exploration of today’s policing challenges. It delves into contemporary topics ranging from police ...
Towards Anti-policing
Towards Anti-policing
Offering a diagnostic global perspective on police brutality, Towards Anti-policing: Prefiguring Possibilities beyond the Thin Blue Line raises critical questions about whether pol...
Police–Public Relations
Police–Public Relations
Over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the meaning of “public-oriented policing” has changed, with great variations between countries. This essay critically analyzes the dich...
Exporting British Policing during the Second World War
Exporting British Policing during the Second World War
Exporting British Policing is a comprehensive study of British military policing in liberated Europe during the Second World War. Preventing and detecting thefts, receiving and pro...
The policing of sexual activity
The policing of sexual activity
This essay starts by discussing the initial police involvement with newly reported sexual offences, covering local policing, problems with reporting to the police, police attitudes...

