Our public and private lives are under surveillance
as never before. Whether we are shopping with a credit
card, walking down the street or emailing a colleague at
work, our activities are monitored. Surveillance has
become more routine, more integrated and more intrusive.
It is vital to ask how and why this should be so, and
assess what the consequences are.
Since September
11th 2001 surveillance has intensified further. Yet
although individuals, groups, governments and states are
more closely monitored, our security is not
assured.
The contributors to this volume explore
the vast range of issues related to increased
surveillance. What is going on in an area clouded by
secrecy from the state and complacent reassurances from
corporations? How do we track suspects and combat crime
without also eroding our civil liberties and sacrificing
our rights to privacy? Does electronic tagging of
prisoners work? What are retailers up to with 'lifestyle
profiling'?
Focusing on these and other issues
such as paedophilia, money-laundering, information
warfare, cybercrime, and related legislation, this book
spotlights benefits and costs of surveillance, and
suggests how it is likely to develop in the future.
Experts from Europe and America offer an international
perspective on what is now a worldwide issue, making
this book of interest to a wide range of people
including legal practitioners, law enforcement agencies,
policymakers and students across the social
sciences.
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