Policing the Risk Society

Author: Richard V. Ericson   Kevin D. Haggerty  

Publisher: University of Toronto Press‎

Publication year: 1997

E-ISBN: 9781442678590

Subject: D523.3 公安

Language: ENG

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Description

Extends the "risk theory" literature into new and important areas, while offering a radical reconception of police work and organization.

Chapter

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 Surveillance

Reflexivity

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

Commodification

An 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 Burden

External 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

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

R

S

T

U

V

W

Y

Z

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