05459nam 2200649 450 991046436390332120200520144314.094-6094-594-5(CKB)3710000000092919(EBL)1951391(SSID)ssj0001215247(PQKBManifestationID)11682440(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001215247(PQKBWorkID)11177013(PQKB)10019393(MiAaPQ)EBC1951391(Au-PeEL)EBL1951391(CaPaEBR)ebr10845695(CaONFJC)MIL663195(OCoLC)903442533(EXLCZ)99371000000009291920121018d2012 uy| 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrCrime, security and surveillance effects for the surveillant and the surveilled /editors, Gudrun Vande Walle, Evelien Van den Herrewegen, Nils ZurawskiThe Hague :Eleven International Publishing,2012.1 online resource (233 p.)Het groene grasDescription based upon print version of record.1-322-31913-8 94-90947-65-2 Includes bibliographical references.Cover (front); Title Page; Table of Contents; Introduction: Crime, Security and Surveillance - Effects for the Surveillant and the Surveilled; Beyond Criminal Law. On the Dutch Anti-Social Behaviour Agenda; 1 Introduction; 2. The British Example; 3. Background of Collective Shop Ban; 4 How Does it Work in Practice?; 5 Conclusion; References; Surveillance in the Supermarket: Technology and the Pluralisation of Crime Control; 1 Introduction; 2 Surveillance as a Situated Practice; 3 The Logics of Supermarket Surveillance: Collecting Strikes and Care; 4 Introducing Facial Recognition5 A Favour that was not asked for6 Conclusion; References; Better Safe Than Sorry, But You Know Don't Overdo It. Responsibilisation and Fatalism in Perception of Safety; 1 Introduction; 2 A Cultural Preoccupation with Being Safe; 3 Fear of Crime as a Late Modern Concept; 4 People's Perceptions of Safety in Everyday Life; 5 Research Design; 6 The Vigilant and Responsible Citizen: Better Safe than Sorry; 7 The Fatalistic Citizen: But You Know, Don't Overdo It: You Can't Prevent and Control Everything!; 8 Conclusion; References; Citizen Journalism, Surveillance and Control; 1 Introduction2 What is Citizen Journalism?3 Two Cases of Citizen Journalism; 4 Surveillance and Control; 5 Discussion; References; The Nodal-Network Fallacy in the Surveillance of Transit Migration in Belgian Harbours; 1 Introduction; 2 Conceptualisation of Flows, Nodes, Networks, Nodal Orientation and Nodal Governance; 3 The Surveillance of Transit Migration in Ostend and Zeebrugge; 4 Conclusion: Some Reflections on a Possible Nodal-Network Fallacy; References; Policing Flows and Nodes: A Dutch Interpretation; 1 Introduction; 2 Dutch Nodal Policing; 3 Cases; 4 Discussion; 5 Conclusions; ReferencesSecuring the Legitimacy of Surveillance: Automatic Number Plate Recognition in Dutch Policing1 Introduction; 2 Legitimacy as a Multidimensional Concept; 3 Policy Context: Nodal Orientation; 4 Case Study: ANPR in Police Surveillance; 5 Conclusion; References; The Political Geography of Public Space. On Criminalisation and Punishment, Privatisation, Dispersion and Exclusion; 1 Introduction; 2 Public Space and Social Control; 3 Welcome to the Public Space; 4 Political Geography Strategies; 5 Conclusion: Does COP (Community-Oriented Policing) Lead to Public Order Police?; ReferencesPolice and Surveillance in Paris: Are the French Police Becoming Knowledge Workers and Risk Managers?1 Introduction; 2 The Police as Risk Managers: a New Conceptualisation of Police Work; 3 The Paris Urban Police Service as Information Brokers; 4 The Paris Transport Service: a Highly Visible Use of Force in High-Risk Territories; 5 Conclusion: Old Wine in New Bottles or a Gradual Change?; References; Multiple Views of DNA Surveillance: The Surveilled, the Surveillants and the Academics; 1 Introduction; 2 The Legal Background; 3 Methodology; 4 Views on Profile Inclusion and Removal Criteria5 Non-Removal of DNA Profiles to Protect Individual RightsThe surveillance society has significantly been discussed in social sciences over the last ten years. Phenomena like terrorist threats and illegal migration flows on the one hand, and an anxious Western population on the other, which seem to legitimize a considerable growth and sophistication of databases and surveillance technologies. Surveillance technologies may lead towards a more secure society for some. However, they also have a profound rearranging effect on society and may be a threat for fundamental human rights. For these reasons, social scientists have tried to slow down this fast-mGroene grasElectronic surveillanceElectronic books.Electronic surveillance.363.25Vande Walle GudrunHerrewegen Evelien Van denZurawski NilsMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910464363903321Crime, security and surveillance1998153UNINA