Buch, Englisch, 722 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 1266 g
Buch, Englisch, 722 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 1266 g
Reihe: Routledge International Handbooks
ISBN: 978-0-367-58140-4
Verlag: Routledge
Technology has become increasingly important to both the function and our understanding of the justice process. Many forms of criminal behaviour are highly dependent upon technology, and crime control has become a predominantly technologically driven process – one where ‘traditional’ technological aids such as fingerprinting or blood sample analysis are supplemented by a dizzying array of tools and techniques including surveillance devices and DNA profiling.
This book offers the first comprehensive and holistic overview of global research on technology, crime and justice. It is divided into five parts, each corresponding with the key stages of the offending and justice process:
- Part I addresses the current conceptual understanding of technology within academia and the criminal justice system;
- Part II gives a comprehensive overview of the current relations between technology and criminal behaviour;
- Part III explores the current technologies within crime control and the ways in which technology underpins contemporary formal and informal social control;
- Part IV sets out some of the fundamental impacts technology is now having upon the judicial process;
- Part V reveals the emerging technologies for crime, control and justice and considers the extent to which new technology can be effectively regulated.
This landmark collection will be essential reading for academics, students and theorists within criminology, sociology, law, engineering and technology, and computer science, as well as practitioners and professionals working within and around the criminal justice system.
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate and Undergraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction Part I Technology, Crime and Justice: Theory and History 1. Theorizing Technology and its Role in Crime and Law Enforcement 2. Technology Crime and Technology Control: Contexts and History Part II Technology, Crime and Harm Section 1 Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) and Digital Crime 3. The Evolving Landscape of Technology-Dependent Crime 4. Technology and Fraud: The ‘Fraudogenic’ Consequences of the Internet Revolution 5. ICTs and Child Sexual Offending: Exploitation Through Indecent Images 6. ICTs and Sexuality 7. ICTs and Interpersonal Violence 8. Online Pharmacies and Technology Crime 9. The Theft of Ideas as a Cybercrime: Downloading and Changes in the Business Model of Creative Arts 10. ICTS, Privacy and the (Criminal) Misuse of Data Section 2 Chemical and Biological Technologies and Crime 11. Crime and Chemical Production 12. Pharmatechnologies and the Ills of Medical Progress 13. Bioengineering and Biocrime Keynote Discussion 14. Technology, Environmental Harm and Green Criminology Section 3 Wider Varieties of Technology Crime 15. Guns, Technology and Crime 16. Crime, Transport and Technology 17. Food Fraud and Food Fraud Detection Technologies 18. Consumer Technologies, Crime and Environment Implications Keynote Discussion: Technology, Crime and Harm 19. Evaluating Technologies as Criminal Tools Part III Technology and Control 20. Crime, Situational Prevention and Technology: The Nature of Opportunity and How it Evolves 21. Technology, Innovation and Twenty-First-Century Policing 22. Contemporary Landscapes of Forensic Innovation 23. Technology and Digital Forensics 24. DNA and Identification 25. Visual Surveillance Technologies 26. Big Data, Predictive Machines and Security: The Minority Report 27. Cognitive Neuroscience, Criminal Justice and Control Keynote Discussion: Technology and Control 28. The Uncertainty Principle: Qualification, Contingency, and Fluidity in Technology and Social Control Part IV Technology and the Process of Justice 29. Establishing Culpability: Forensic Technologies and Justice 30. Technology-augmented and Virtual Courts and Courtrooms 31. Computer-Assisted Sentencing 32. The Technology of Confinement and Quasi-Therapeutic Control: Managing Souls with In-cell Television 33. Punitivity and Technology 34. Public and Expert Voices in the Legal Regulation of Technology Keynote discussion: Technology and the Process of Justice 35. The Force of Law and the Force of Technology Part V Emerging Technologies of Crime and Justice 36. Nanocrime 2.0 37. AI and Bad Robots: The Criminology of Automation 38. Technology, Body and Human Enhancement: Prospects and Justice Keynote discussion: Technology and Justice 39. Technology and Justice.