From offender to victim-oriented monitoring: a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in Argentina and England and Wales

The increasingly psychological terrain of crime and disorder management has had a transformative impact upon the use of electronic monitoring technologies. Surveillance technologies such as electronic monitoring e#8209; EM, biometrics, and video surveillance have flourished in commercial environment...

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Main Author: Craig Paterson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Editora Universitária Champagnat 2015-05-01
Series:Urbe : Revista Brasileira de Gestão Urbana
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www2.pucpr.br/reol/index.php/URBE/pdf?dd1=15157
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spelling doaj-1f6ceab5a7a947c1a98df4455c175ac02020-11-24T21:24:00ZengEditora Universitária ChampagnatUrbe : Revista Brasileira de Gestão Urbana 2175-33692015-05-017215516610.1590/2175-3369.007.002.SE0115157From offender to victim-oriented monitoring: a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in Argentina and England and WalesCraig Paterson0 Sheffield Hallam University, Department of Law and Criminology, Sheffield, United Kingdom, e-mail: c.paterson@shu.ac.ukThe increasingly psychological terrain of crime and disorder management has had a transformative impact upon the use of electronic monitoring technologies. Surveillance technologies such as electronic monitoring e#8209; EM, biometrics, and video surveillance have flourished in commercial environments that market the benefits of asocial technologies in managing disorderly behavior and which, despite often chimerical crime prevention promises, appeal to the ontologically insecure social imagination. The growth of EM in criminal justice has subsequently taken place despite, at best, equivocal evidence that it protects the public and reduces recidivism. Innovative developments in Portugal, Argentina and the United States have re-imagined EM technologies as more personalized devices that can support victims rather than control offenders. These developments represent a re-conceptualization of the use of the technology beyond the neoliberal prism of rational choice theories and offender-oriented thinking that influenced first generation thinking about EM. This paper identifies the socio-political influences that helped conceptualize first generation thinking about EM as, firstly, a community sentence and latterly, as a technique of urban security. The paper reviews attempts to theorize the role and function of EM surveillance technologies within and beyond criminal justice and explores the contribution of victimological perspectives to the use of EM 2.0.http://www2.pucpr.br/reol/index.php/URBE/pdf?dd1=15157Electronic monitoringCriminal justiceVictim-orientationPolicy transfer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Craig Paterson
spellingShingle Craig Paterson
From offender to victim-oriented monitoring: a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in Argentina and England and Wales
Urbe : Revista Brasileira de Gestão Urbana
Electronic monitoring
Criminal justice
Victim-orientation
Policy transfer
author_facet Craig Paterson
author_sort Craig Paterson
title From offender to victim-oriented monitoring: a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in Argentina and England and Wales
title_short From offender to victim-oriented monitoring: a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in Argentina and England and Wales
title_full From offender to victim-oriented monitoring: a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in Argentina and England and Wales
title_fullStr From offender to victim-oriented monitoring: a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in Argentina and England and Wales
title_full_unstemmed From offender to victim-oriented monitoring: a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in Argentina and England and Wales
title_sort from offender to victim-oriented monitoring: a comparative analysis of the emergence of electronic monitoring systems in argentina and england and wales
publisher Editora Universitária Champagnat
series Urbe : Revista Brasileira de Gestão Urbana
issn 2175-3369
publishDate 2015-05-01
description The increasingly psychological terrain of crime and disorder management has had a transformative impact upon the use of electronic monitoring technologies. Surveillance technologies such as electronic monitoring e#8209; EM, biometrics, and video surveillance have flourished in commercial environments that market the benefits of asocial technologies in managing disorderly behavior and which, despite often chimerical crime prevention promises, appeal to the ontologically insecure social imagination. The growth of EM in criminal justice has subsequently taken place despite, at best, equivocal evidence that it protects the public and reduces recidivism. Innovative developments in Portugal, Argentina and the United States have re-imagined EM technologies as more personalized devices that can support victims rather than control offenders. These developments represent a re-conceptualization of the use of the technology beyond the neoliberal prism of rational choice theories and offender-oriented thinking that influenced first generation thinking about EM. This paper identifies the socio-political influences that helped conceptualize first generation thinking about EM as, firstly, a community sentence and latterly, as a technique of urban security. The paper reviews attempts to theorize the role and function of EM surveillance technologies within and beyond criminal justice and explores the contribution of victimological perspectives to the use of EM 2.0.
topic Electronic monitoring
Criminal justice
Victim-orientation
Policy transfer
url http://www2.pucpr.br/reol/index.php/URBE/pdf?dd1=15157
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