Big Data, Crime and Social Control
Ales Zavrsnik (Redaktør)
- Vår pris
- 574,-
(Paperback)
Fri frakt!
Leveringstid: Sendes innen 21 dager
På grunn av Brexit-tilpasninger og tiltak for å begrense covid-19 kan det dessverre oppstå forsinket levering.
(Paperback)
Fri frakt!
Leveringstid: Sendes innen 21 dager
På grunn av Brexit-tilpasninger og tiltak for å begrense covid-19 kan det dessverre oppstå forsinket levering.
Drawing on research from Europe and the US, this book identifies the various ways in which law and ethics intersect with the application of big data in social and crime control, considers potential challenges to human rights and democracy and recommends regulatory solutions and best practice. This book focuses on changes in knowledge production and the manifold sites of contemporary surveillance, ranging from self-surveillance to corporate and state surveillance. It tackles the implications of big data and predictive algorithmic analytics for social justice, social equality, and social power: concepts at the very core of crime and social control.
This book will be of interest to scholars and students of criminology, sociology, politics and socio-legal studies.
Part I: Introduction
1. Big Data: What Is It and Why Does it Matter for Crime and Social Control? (Ales Zavrsnik)
Part II: Automated Social Control
2. Paradoxes of Privacy in an Era of Asymmetrical Social Control (Frank Pasquale)
3. Big Data - Big Ignorance (Renata Salecl)
4. Machines, Humans, and the Question of Control (Zoran Kanduc)
Part III: Automated Policing
5. Data Collection Without Limits: Automated Policing and the Politics of Framelessness (Mark Andrejevic)
6. Algorithmic Patrol: The Futures of Predictive Policing (Dean Wilson)
Part IV: Automated Justice
7. Algorithmic Crime Control (Ales Zavrsnik)
8. Subjectivity, Algorithms, and the Courtroom (Katja Sugman Stubbs and Mojca M. Plesnicar)
Part V: Big Data Automation Limitations
9. Judicial Oversight of the (Mass) Collection and Processing of Personal Data (Primoz Gorkic)
10. Big Data and Economic Cyber Espionage: An International Law Perspective (Marusa T. Veber and Masa Kovic Dine)
Index