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Portrait David Brehm Sausdal. Photo: Johan Persson.

David Sausdal

Associate professor | Associate senior lecturer

Portrait David Brehm Sausdal. Photo: Johan Persson.

Policing at a distance and that human thing : An appreciative critique of police surveillance

Author

  • David Sausdal

Summary, in English

Policing technologies are increasingly being developed to surveil and control people from afar. This is especially true in relation to cross-border crimes and other global threats where the necessity of monitoring such illegal flows is often advocated. In the literature, this is sometimes referred to as “policing at a distance,” signifying how the growth in different policing technologies is allowing police to oversee people without coming into physical contact with them. Overall, scholars find this development alarming. It is alarming because it reduces human lives to data points and because studies have shown how policing at a distance may trigger hateful police attitudes. With these problems of policing at a distance in mind, this article explores how an increasing use of surveillance technologies affects Danish detectives.

Publishing year

2019

Language

English

Pages

51-64

Publication/Series

Focaal

Volume

2019

Issue

85

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Berghahn Books

Topic

  • Sociology

Keywords

  • (de)humanization
  • Critique
  • Cross-border crime
  • Policing (at a distance)
  • Surveillance

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0920-1297