ABSTRACT

Technology has become increasingly important to both the function and our understanding of the justice process. Many forms of criminal behaviour are highly dependent upon technology, and crime control has become a predominantly technologically driven process – one where ‘traditional’ technological aids such as fingerprinting or blood sample analysis are supplemented by a dizzying array of tools and techniques including surveillance devices and DNA profiling.

This book offers the first comprehensive and holistic overview of global research on technology, crime and justice. It is divided into five parts, each corresponding with the key stages of the offending and justice process:

  • Part I addresses the current conceptual understanding of technology within academia and the criminal justice system;
  • Part II gives a comprehensive overview of the current relations between technology and criminal behaviour;
  • Part III explores the current technologies within crime control and the ways in which technology underpins contemporary formal and informal social control;
  • Part IV sets out some of the fundamental impacts technology is now having upon the judicial process;
  • Part V reveals the emerging technologies for crime, control and justice and considers the extent to which new technology can be effectively regulated.

This landmark collection will be essential reading for academics, students and theorists within criminology, sociology, law, engineering and technology, and computer science, as well as practitioners and professionals working within and around the criminal justice system.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

The interface of climate change and food security

part 1|46 pages

Technology, crime and justice

part 2|290 pages

Technology, crime and harm

part 3|132 pages

Information communication technologies (ICTs) and digital crime

chapter 4|18 pages

Technology and fraud

The ‘fraudogenic’ consequences of the Internet revolution

chapter 5|17 pages

ICTs and child sexual offending

Exploitation through indecent images

chapter 6|21 pages

ICTs and sexuality

chapter 7|12 pages

ICTs and interpersonal violence

chapter 9|17 pages

The theft of ideas as a cybercrime

Downloading and changes in the business model of creative arts

part 4|66 pages

Chemical and biological technologies and crime

chapter 11|17 pages

Crime and chemical production

chapter 13|11 pages

Bioengineering and biocrime

part 5|22 pages

Keynote discussion

part 6|90 pages

Wider varieties of technology crime

chapter 15|18 pages

Guns, technology and crime

chapter 16|14 pages

Crime, transport and technology

part 7|26 pages

Keynote discussion

part 8|152 pages

Technology and control

chapter 20|22 pages

Crime, situational prevention and technology

The nature of opportunity and how it evolves

chapter 23|11 pages

Technology and digital forensics

chapter 24|19 pages

DNA and identification

chapter 25|15 pages

Visual surveillance technologies

chapter 26|11 pages

Big data, predictive machines and security

The minority report 1

part 9|24 pages

Keynote discussion

chapter 28|22 pages

The uncertainty principle

Qualification, contingency and fluidity in technology and social control

part 10|105 pages

Technology and the process of justice

chapter 29|13 pages

Establishing culpability

Forensic technologies and justice

chapter 31|15 pages

Computer-assisted sentencing

chapter 32|18 pages

The technology of confinement and quasi-therapeutic control

Managing souls with in-cell television

part 11|13 pages

Keynote discussion

part 12|75 pages

Emerging technologies of crime and justice

chapter 36|32 pages

Nanocrime 2.0

chapter 37|11 pages

AI and bad robots

The criminology of automation

chapter 38|19 pages

Technology, body and human enhancement

Prospects and justice

part 13|11 pages

Keynote discussion

chapter 39|9 pages

Justice and technology