Book contents
- Monitoring Laws
- Monitoring Laws
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Monitoring Laws
- 2 The Image and Institutional Identity
- 3 Images and Biometrics – Privacy and Stigmatisation
- 4 Dossiers, Behavioural Data, and Secret Speculation
- 5 Data Subject Rights and the Importance of Access
- 6 Automation, Actuarial Identity, and Law Enforcement Informatics
- 7 Algorithmic Accountability and the Statistical Legal Subject
- 8 From Photographic Image to Computer Vision
- 9 Person, Place, and Contest in the World State
- 10 Law and Legal Automation in the World State
- Index
6 - Automation, Actuarial Identity, and Law Enforcement Informatics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 November 2019
- Monitoring Laws
- Monitoring Laws
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Monitoring Laws
- 2 The Image and Institutional Identity
- 3 Images and Biometrics – Privacy and Stigmatisation
- 4 Dossiers, Behavioural Data, and Secret Speculation
- 5 Data Subject Rights and the Importance of Access
- 6 Automation, Actuarial Identity, and Law Enforcement Informatics
- 7 Algorithmic Accountability and the Statistical Legal Subject
- 8 From Photographic Image to Computer Vision
- 9 Person, Place, and Contest in the World State
- 10 Law and Legal Automation in the World State
- Index
Summary
Automated profiling, predictive analytics, and data mining represent the extension of nineteenth-century statistical models through the lens of computation. Algorithmic pattern matching also has origins in supermarket management, as well as the discipline of operations research that developed through the Vietnam War. When applied to law enforcement, policing, and criminal justice, this has led to a plethora of systems used by governments, typically developed by private companies, used for intelligence, predictive policing, and criminal justice risk assessments. This chapter argues that the establishment and proliferation of these tools has cemented the primacy of statistical knowledge systems as the primary systems of evaluation by which individuals are interpreted and known by states.
Keywords
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- Information
- Monitoring LawsProfiling and Identity in the World State, pp. 99 - 113Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019