Privacy rights and related civil liberties in the criminal process are being affected in new ways as digital policing is being shaped by new degrees of data analytics practices. Between 2016 and 2021, a great deal of media attention, pressure from human rights NGOs, academic scrutiny, and regulatory oversight sprang up in relation to policing data analytics practices in the UK. Live facial recognition, offender risk profiling, hotspots policing, crime investigation triage, and mobile device data extraction have all been deemed controversial for different reasons. New forms of accountability have arisen in response: New mechanisms like police data ethics committees, supplemented by soft regulation through codes of practice and the recommenda...
Law enforcement agencies present technology as 'race' neutral, independent of bias, and objective in...
The future of policing will be driven by data. Crime, criminals, and patterns of criminal activity w...
Open-source crime data provided by the Police.uk website was introduced in 2008. This provision chal...
RUSI was commissioned by the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation (CDEI) to conduct an independent ...
As police services adopt new technologies to fight crime, numerous ethical, legal and privacy-relate...
The Chapter explores how the different legal frameworks related to the Directive 2012/13 on the righ...
Intelligence-led policing, as a specific policing approach relying on information sharing and big da...
This paper summarises the use of analytics and algorithms for policing within England and Wales, and...
The growing use of data-driven policing raises pertinent questions as to how the datafication of so...
Predictive Policing for law enforcement authorities (LEAs) encompasses the provision of Big Data ana...
The chapter will outline recent cases and controversies (such as the use of facial recognition at No...
This article is an exploration of some of the legal, policy and practical issues of using what is te...
n the hopes of making law enforcement more effective and efficient, police and intelligence analysts...
This thesis examines the impact of Open Crime Data in the United Kingdom (U.K.). Wide claims are mad...
This paper discusses the police use of automated facial recognition technology (FRT) as a tool of cr...
Law enforcement agencies present technology as 'race' neutral, independent of bias, and objective in...
The future of policing will be driven by data. Crime, criminals, and patterns of criminal activity w...
Open-source crime data provided by the Police.uk website was introduced in 2008. This provision chal...
RUSI was commissioned by the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation (CDEI) to conduct an independent ...
As police services adopt new technologies to fight crime, numerous ethical, legal and privacy-relate...
The Chapter explores how the different legal frameworks related to the Directive 2012/13 on the righ...
Intelligence-led policing, as a specific policing approach relying on information sharing and big da...
This paper summarises the use of analytics and algorithms for policing within England and Wales, and...
The growing use of data-driven policing raises pertinent questions as to how the datafication of so...
Predictive Policing for law enforcement authorities (LEAs) encompasses the provision of Big Data ana...
The chapter will outline recent cases and controversies (such as the use of facial recognition at No...
This article is an exploration of some of the legal, policy and practical issues of using what is te...
n the hopes of making law enforcement more effective and efficient, police and intelligence analysts...
This thesis examines the impact of Open Crime Data in the United Kingdom (U.K.). Wide claims are mad...
This paper discusses the police use of automated facial recognition technology (FRT) as a tool of cr...
Law enforcement agencies present technology as 'race' neutral, independent of bias, and objective in...
The future of policing will be driven by data. Crime, criminals, and patterns of criminal activity w...
Open-source crime data provided by the Police.uk website was introduced in 2008. This provision chal...