Panoptic Dreams
Streetscape Video Surveillance in Canada
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of British Columbia Press
Published:1st Jan '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book explains how and why streetscape video surveillance systems have appeared in Canada and provides much-needed data for debates on the ethics and utility of surveillance in Western democracies.
A definitive study of the implementation and implications of streetscape video surveillance systems in Canada.
The past few decades have seen a proliferation of video surveillance systems in major centres in a number of Western countries. Is this development in the public interest, or does it signal a move toward more intrusive forms of policing?
This book provides much-needed data for this debate as it explores how and why some Canadian cities introduced street surveillance programs between 1981 and 2005, and it brings to light the governance structures and privacy protection policy frameworks that made these programs possible. Although surveillance initiatives sprang from a dream to establish a crime-prevention system of discipline and social control, that dream soon gave way to rationalizations based on the idea that streetscape video surveillance is a crime-solving tool that makes people feel safer. Panoptic Dreams not only identifies good practice in planning, design, and implementation, it will foster informed debate about the ethics and utility of streetscape video surveillance in Western democracies.
ISBN: 9780774818728
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 500g
328 pages