'Assisted' facial recognition and the reinvention of suspicion and discretion in digital policing
'Assisted' facial recognition and the reinvention of suspicion and discretion in digital policing
Automated facial recognition (AFR) has emerged as one of the most controversial policing innovations of recent years. Drawing on empirical data collected during the United Kingdom’s two major police trials of AFR deployments—and building on insights from the sociology of policing, surveillance studies and science and technology studies—this article advances several arguments. Tracing a lineage from early sociologies of policing that accented the importance of police discretion and suspicion formation, the analysis illuminates how technological capability is conditioned by police discretion, but police discretion itself is also contingent on affordances brought by the operational and technical environment. These, in turn, frame and ‘legitimate’ subjects of a reinvented and digitally mediated ‘bureaucratic suspicion’.
325–344
Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Davies, Bethan
551deced-531a-4df0-8f2a-0117111ef2a9
Innes, Martin
0f48afdd-db60-40ac-a570-198e18bdcf31
March 2021
Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Davies, Bethan
551deced-531a-4df0-8f2a-0117111ef2a9
Innes, Martin
0f48afdd-db60-40ac-a570-198e18bdcf31
Fussey, Pete, Davies, Bethan and Innes, Martin
(2021)
'Assisted' facial recognition and the reinvention of suspicion and discretion in digital policing.
British Journal of Criminology, 61 (2), .
(doi:10.1093/bjc/azaa068).
Abstract
Automated facial recognition (AFR) has emerged as one of the most controversial policing innovations of recent years. Drawing on empirical data collected during the United Kingdom’s two major police trials of AFR deployments—and building on insights from the sociology of policing, surveillance studies and science and technology studies—this article advances several arguments. Tracing a lineage from early sociologies of policing that accented the importance of police discretion and suspicion formation, the analysis illuminates how technological capability is conditioned by police discretion, but police discretion itself is also contingent on affordances brought by the operational and technical environment. These, in turn, frame and ‘legitimate’ subjects of a reinvented and digitally mediated ‘bureaucratic suspicion’.
Text
azaa068
- Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 13 October 2020
Published date: March 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 495618
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495618
ISSN: 0007-0955
PURE UUID: 660a1b9d-7f25-41a2-8ecd-c6d0584f75a5
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Date deposited: 19 Nov 2024 17:44
Last modified: 21 Nov 2024 03:11
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Author:
Pete Fussey
Author:
Bethan Davies
Author:
Martin Innes
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