Watch groups, surveillance, and doing it for themselves
Watch groups, surveillance, and doing it for themselves
This paper focuses on surveillant relations between citizens and police. We consider how online platforms enable the public to support the task of policing, as well as empowering the public to work without and beyond the police. While community-supported policing interventions are not new, more recently mobile and accessible technologies have promoted and enabled a DIY (Do-It-Yourself) culture towards policing amongst the public. The paper examines watch groups or those who task themselves with monitoring suspicious or actual behaviours. We consider two empirical examples: first, a community alert group mediated through social media. Second, a group of businesses that circulate, via a website, CCTV images of (alleged) wrongdoing in their premises. Drawing on David Garland’s (1996) work on responsibilisation, we situate the growth of these types of responsibilised groups within the contemporary economic and political climate of crime control in the UK. We argue that citizens are establishing new surveillant relations that are pushing policing in new and evolving directions.
288-304
Spiller, Keith
d0ea9172-6ef6-4f80-9f34-2285b41ab237
L'Hoiry, Xavier
eef93147-0a2f-4134-92c8-dfd97d3955bf
7 September 2019
Spiller, Keith
d0ea9172-6ef6-4f80-9f34-2285b41ab237
L'Hoiry, Xavier
eef93147-0a2f-4134-92c8-dfd97d3955bf
Spiller, Keith and L'Hoiry, Xavier
(2019)
Watch groups, surveillance, and doing it for themselves.
Surveillance and Society, 17 (3/4), .
(doi:10.24908/ss.v17i3/4.8637).
Abstract
This paper focuses on surveillant relations between citizens and police. We consider how online platforms enable the public to support the task of policing, as well as empowering the public to work without and beyond the police. While community-supported policing interventions are not new, more recently mobile and accessible technologies have promoted and enabled a DIY (Do-It-Yourself) culture towards policing amongst the public. The paper examines watch groups or those who task themselves with monitoring suspicious or actual behaviours. We consider two empirical examples: first, a community alert group mediated through social media. Second, a group of businesses that circulate, via a website, CCTV images of (alleged) wrongdoing in their premises. Drawing on David Garland’s (1996) work on responsibilisation, we situate the growth of these types of responsibilised groups within the contemporary economic and political climate of crime control in the UK. We argue that citizens are establishing new surveillant relations that are pushing policing in new and evolving directions.
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 7 September 2019
Published date: 7 September 2019
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© The author(s), 2019.
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 471250
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471250
PURE UUID: 257515ed-492d-4b1c-bba8-cf17ea6e9145
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Date deposited: 01 Nov 2022 17:41
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14
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Author:
Keith Spiller
Author:
Xavier L'Hoiry
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