Policing the Risk Society /
Ericson and Haggerty contend that the police have become information brokers to institutions such as insurance companies and health and welfare organizations that operate based on a knowledge of risk.
Autores principales: | , |
---|---|
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Toronto, Ont. :
University of Toronto Press,
1997.
|
Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- CONTENTS
- FOREWORD
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- Introduction
- Part I: Policing
- 1 Policing as Risk Communications
- The Police as Knowledge Workers
- Communication Formats, Technology, and Police Discretion
- 2 Policing, Risk, and Law
- Risk, Surveillance, and Security
- Regulatory Law
- System Surveillance and Actuarial Justice
- 3 Community Policing and Risk Communications
- Community Policing
- Communications Policing
- Part II: The Risk Society
- 4 Risk Discourse
- Discourse
- Logics
- Biopower and Governmentality
- Bureaucracy and SurveillanceReflexivity
- 5 Risk Institutions
- Professions
- Media Formats
- Insurance Formats
- 6 Risk and Social Change
- Accumulating Change
- Privacy and Trust
- Fragmentation
- Inequality
- Morality, Responsibility, Accountability, and Rights
- Researching the Risk Society
- Part III: Risks to Territories
- 7 Tracing Territories
- Tracing and Governance
- Electronic Infrastructures
- Spatial Arrangements
- Inspection Devices
- 8 Mobilizing Territories
- Watch Programs
- Corporate Programs
- CommodificationAn Imaginary Community
- 9 Territorial Communities
- Making Up Communities
- Community Networks
- Part IV: Risks to Securities, Careers, and Identities
- 10 Securities
- Securities Policing
- Commercial Regulation
- Vehicle Registration
- Financial Instruments
- Equities
- Computerized Knowledge
- 11 Careers
- Insurance
- Credentials
- Health
- Criminal Justice
- 12 Identities
- Population Identities
- Age
- Race and Ethnicity
- Part V: Risks to Police Organization
- 13 Knowledge Risk Management
- The Paper BurdenExternal Sources
- Internal Sources
- 14 Communication Rules
- Criminal Procedure
- Information Law
- Centralized Regulation of Access
- Commodification of Police Knowledge
- Policy Manuals
- Audits
- 15 Communication Formats
- The Politics of Forms
- Patrolling the Facts
- Format Effects
- 16 Communication Technologies
- Technological Solutions
- Police System Surveillance
- Problems and Resistance
- More Paper Burdens
- Summary and Conclusions
- REFERENCES
- INDEX
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- Gh
- i
- j
- k
- l
- m
- n
- o
- p
- r
- s
- t
- u
- v
- w
- y
- z