Police Visibility: Privacy, Surveillance, and the False Promise of Body-Worn Cameras


Price:
Sale price$37.44

Description

Police Visibility presents empirically grounded research into how police officers experience and manage the information politics of surveillance and visibility generated by the introduction of body cameras into their daily routines and the increasingly common experience of being recorded by civilian bystanders. Newell elucidates how these activities intersect with privacy, free speech, and access to information law and argues that rather than being emancipatory systems of police oversight, body-worn cameras are an evolution in police image work and state surveillance expansion. Throughout the book, he catalogs how surveillance generates information, the control of which creates and facilitates power and potentially fuels state domination. The antidote, he argues, is robust information law and policy that puts the power to monitor and regulate the police squarely in the hands of citizens.


Author: Bryce Clayton Newell
Publisher: University of California Press
Published: 06/15/2021
Pages: 260
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.75lbs
Size: 9.00h x 5.90w x 0.80d
ISBN13: 9780520382909
ISBN10: 0520382900
BISAC Categories:
- Law | Media & the Law
- Social Science | Privacy & Surveillance (see also Political Science | Privacy
- Social Science | Media Studies

About the Author
Bryce Clayton Newell is Assistant Professor of Media Law and Policy in the School of Journalism and Communication at the University of Oregon. He is the editor of Police on Camera, Privacy in Public Space, and Surveillance, Privacy, and Public Space.

You may also like

Recently viewed