Surveillance, crime and social control

Contents: Series preface Introduction. Part I Theory: I'll be watching you: reflections on the new surveillance, Gary T. Marx Bentham's Panopticon: from moral architecture to electronic surveillance, David Lyon Postscript on the societies of control. Gilles Deleuze The viewer society: Michel Foucault's Panopticon revisited, Thomas Mathiesen The surveillant assemblage, Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson. Part II CCTV: CCTV and the social structuring of surveillance, Clive Norris and Gary Armstrong 'You'll never walk alone': CCTV surveillance, order and neo-liberal rule in Liverpool city centre, Roy Coleman and Joe Sim Seen and now heard: talking to the targets of open-street CCTV, Emma Short and Jason Ditton The eyes have it: CCTV as the '5th utility' , S. Graham) Yes it works - no it doesn't: comparing the effects of open-street CCTV in 2 adjacent Scottish town centres, Jason Ditton and Emma Short State surveillance and the right to privacy, Nick Taylor Video surveillance, gender and the safety of public urban space: 'Peeping Tom' goes high tech, Hille Koskela. Part III Undercover Police Surveillance: Undercover policing in Canada: wanting what is wrong, Jean-Paul Brodeur Towards a sociological model of the police informant, Steven Greer Subterranean blues: conflict as an unintended consequence of the police use of informers, Clive Norris and Colin Dunnighan Snitching and the code of the street, Richard Rosenfeld, Bruce A. Jacobs and Richard Wright. Part IV Bodies, Databases and Technologies: The body and the archive, Allan Sekula The electronic panopticon: a case study of the development of the National Criminal Records System, Diana R. Gordon Critique: no soul in the machine: technofallacies in the electronic monitoring movement, Ronald Corbett and Gary T. Marx News media, popular culture and the electronic monitoring of offenders in England and Wales, Mike Nellis Written on the body: biometrics and identity, Irma van der Pleog Governanc