Book contents
- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance
- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The Golden Age of Racial Surveillance
- 2 Sorting Identity
- 3 Imperial Mimesis
- 4 The Racialisation of British Women during the Long Nineteenth Century
- 5 Linking Caste and Surveillance
- 6 Surveillance in South Africa
- 7 Israel/Palestine, North America, and Surveillance
- 8 Colonialism’s Uneasy Legacy
- 9 China’s Surveillance and Repression in Xinjiang
- 10 Asian Americans as “the Perpetual Foreigner” under Scrutiny
- 11 The Great White Father and His Little Red Children
- 12 In a Most Excellent and Perfect Order
- 13 Surveillance and Public Schools
- 14 Surveillance and Preventing Violent Extremism
- 15 Resistance and the Politics of Surveillance and Control
- 16 Surveilled Subjects and Technologically Mediated Law Enforcement
16 - Surveilled Subjects and Technologically Mediated Law Enforcement
Reflecting on Relational Concerns
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 February 2023
- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance
- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The Golden Age of Racial Surveillance
- 2 Sorting Identity
- 3 Imperial Mimesis
- 4 The Racialisation of British Women during the Long Nineteenth Century
- 5 Linking Caste and Surveillance
- 6 Surveillance in South Africa
- 7 Israel/Palestine, North America, and Surveillance
- 8 Colonialism’s Uneasy Legacy
- 9 China’s Surveillance and Repression in Xinjiang
- 10 Asian Americans as “the Perpetual Foreigner” under Scrutiny
- 11 The Great White Father and His Little Red Children
- 12 In a Most Excellent and Perfect Order
- 13 Surveillance and Public Schools
- 14 Surveillance and Preventing Violent Extremism
- 15 Resistance and the Politics of Surveillance and Control
- 16 Surveilled Subjects and Technologically Mediated Law Enforcement
Summary
Law enforcement is increasingly reliant on technology to automate encounters with the public, identify persons to be targeted for further scrutiny, and document interpersonal interactions. As a result, public contacts with police are transitioning from traditional interpersonal interactions to interactions that are increasingly technologically mediated. This chapter reflects on that transition and speculates on the ways in which police–community relations, particularly relations with some racial minority communities, may be affected by this transition. A central argument in favor of technologically mediated law enforcement (e.g., automated license plate readers, facial recognition software, body-worn cameras) is that this new style of policing has the ability to ensure equal protection under the law, enhancing police legitimacy, and mending poor community–police relations. Some see the introduction of technology into law enforcement encounters as a solution to resolving mistrust associated with fractured relations between police and the communities that they serve, particularly for some racial minority communities.
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- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance , pp. 304 - 322Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023
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