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The core baseline of Intelligence-led Policing is the aim of increasing efficiency and quality of police work, with a focus on crime analysis and intelligence methods as tools for informed and objective decisions both when conducting targeted, specialized operations and when setting strategic priorities. This book critically addresses the proliferation of intelligence logics within policing from a wide array of scholarly perspectives. It considers questions such as:
This book offers new insights by exploring dilemmas, legal issues and questions raised by the use of new policing methods and the blurred and confrontational lines that can be observed between prevention, intelligence and investigation in police work.
Show moreThe core baseline of Intelligence-led Policing is the aim of increasing efficiency and quality of police work, with a focus on crime analysis and intelligence methods as tools for informed and objective decisions both when conducting targeted, specialized operations and when setting strategic priorities. This book critically addresses the proliferation of intelligence logics within policing from a wide array of scholarly perspectives. It considers questions such as:
This book offers new insights by exploring dilemmas, legal issues and questions raised by the use of new policing methods and the blurred and confrontational lines that can be observed between prevention, intelligence and investigation in police work.
Show moreIntroduction, Nicholas R. Fyfe, Helene O.I. Gundhus and Kira Vrist Rønn, Part I: The proliferation of intelligence-led policing. 1. Police practices in the age of precaution: A moral typology, Vidar Halvorsen, 2. Investigation or instigation? Enforcing grooming legislation, Heidi Mork Lomell, 3. Predicting crime? On challenges to the police in becoming knowledgeable organizations, Nadja K. Hestehave, Part II: New logics – new measures? 4. The preventive use of surveillance measures in the protection of National security: A comparative analysis of Dutch, Norwegian and Swedish legislation, Ingvild Bruce, 5. On the hunt: Aspects of the use of communication control in Norway, Paul Larsson, 6. The professional ethics of intelligence: On the feasibility of ethics as internal self-regulation of intelligence activities, Kira Vrist Rønn, Part III: Innovations and new technologies. 7. The co-construction of crime predictions: Dynamics between digital data, software and human beings, Mareile Kaufmann, 8. Grey zone creativity: The case of proactive policing, Mia R.K. Hartmann, Part IV: Outsourcing police work. 9. Plural policing webs: Unveiling the various forms of partnering and knowledge exchange in the production of nightlife territoriality, Thomas Friis Søgaard and Esben Houborg, 10. Privatization of intelligence-led policing: Auditors doing forensic work, Janne Flyghed, Part V: Joining forces. 11. Negotiating risks and threats: Securing the border through the lens of intelligence, Helene O. I. Gundhus, 12. The changing ecology and equity of policing: Some implications of reconfiguring boundaries in an era of police reform, Nicholas R. Fyfe, Part VI: Old crimes, new ways. 13. Policy making without politics: Overstating objectivity in intelligence-led policing, Annette Vestby, 14. Banning and banishing outlaw motorcycle gangs, Synnøve Jahnsen, Index.
Nicholas R. Fyfe is Professor and Associate Dean in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Dundee, UK, and Director of the Scottish Institute for Policing Research
Helene O. I. Gundhus is a professor at the Department of Criminology and Sociology of Law at the University of Oslo, Norway, and Professor II at the Norwegian Police University College
Kira Vrist Rønn is a lecturer at the Metropolitan University College in Copenhagen, Denmark
"In seeking to examine the dilemmas and legal implications of
proactive policing through an intelligence-led approach, the
editors have collated some insightful chapters that raise important
questions about risk and accountability in the crime prevention
domain. As Western police services are increasingly interested in
forecasting threats rather than reacting to events, the chapters in
this book are a timely discussion of the challenges of reducing
uncertainty while retaining democratic principles. Chapter authors
are largely Scandinavian, lending a refreshing perspective to this
interesting book."- Jerry H. Ratcliffe, Professor in the Department
of Criminal Justice and Director of the Center for Security and
Crime Science, Temple University, USA"Nordic criminology has long
been appreciated internationally for its penetrating theoretical
insights and solid research tradition. This book is a welcome
contribution to the literature on intelligence-led policing by the
leading lights of 21st century Scandinavian police research.
Pre-crime, preventive and pro-active policing, surveillance and
intelligence analysis are all part of a complex professional
language usually only addressed in terms of efficacy. This book
goes beyond questions concerning ‘what works in intelligence-led
policing’. Instead, this book asks the ethical questions and gets
at what matters in policing."- James Sheptycki, Professor of
Criminology, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies, York
University, Canada"This rich collection of academic contributions
on intelligence-led policing should be regarded as a timely arrival
in the era of counter-terrorism, in which surveillance, undercover
methods and predictive risk assessment are becoming widely accepted
and applied to a growing range of crimes and public offences. By
its very nature intelligence-led policing is covert and intrusive,
which leaves no opportunity for citizens to consent. The reduction
of due process guarantees should be a major source of concern: not
only border police but all forms of law enforcement and social
scrutiny now routinely work with predictive algorithms, in which
each and every individual is framed, whether criminal or not. The
authors are right to claim that this reconfiguration of powers,
organizational rationales and technological innovations is
potentially toxic and that it should spark a social debate about
the relationship between police, politics and communities."- Monica
den Boer, Director of SeQure Research & Consultancy and Adjunct
Professor at the Department of Criminology and Security Studies,
Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
"Nordic criminology has long been appreciated internationally for
its penetrating theoretical insights and solid research tradition.
This book is a welcome contribution to the literature on
intelligence-led policing by the leading lights of 21st century
Scandinavian police research. Pre-crime, preventive and pro-active
policing, surveillance and intelligence analysis are all part of a
complex professional language usually only addressed in terms of
efficacy. This book goes beyond questions concerning ‘what works in
intelligence-led policing’. Instead, this book asks the ethical
questions and gets at what matters in policing."- James Sheptycki,
Professor of Criminology, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional
Studies, York University, Canada"This rich collection of academic
contributions on intelligence-led policing should be regarded as a
timely arrival in the era of counter-terrorism, in which
surveillance, undercover methods and predictive risk assessment are
becoming widely accepted and applied to a growing range of crimes
and public offences. By its very nature intelligence-led policing
is covert and intrusive, which leaves no opportunity for citizens
to consent. The reduction of due process guarantees should be a
major source of concern: not only border police but all forms of
law enforcement and social scrutiny now routinely work with
predictive algorithms, in which each and every individual is
framed, whether criminal or not. The authors are right to claim
that this reconfiguration of powers, organizational rationales and
technological innovations is potentially toxic and that it should
spark a social debate about the relationship between police,
politics and communities."- Monica den Boer, Director of SeQure
Research & Consultancy and Adjunct Professor at the Department of
Criminology and Security Studies, Macquarie University, Sydney,
Australia.
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