Body Cameras, Big Data, and Police Accountability

IF 1.4 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Mary D. Fan
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

The increase in data from police-worn body cameras can illuminate formerly opaque practices. This article discusses using audiovisual big data from police-worn body cameras, citizen recordings, and other sources to address blind spots in police oversight. Based on body camera policies in America's largest cities, it discusses two possible roadblocks: (1) data retention and deletion, and (2) limits on use for evaluation and discipline. Although recordings are retained for criminal prosecutions, retention for oversight and accountability is overlooked or is contentious. Some departments have no policy on videos concerning civil suits against the police. The retention time for non-evidentiary recordings is also much shorter. Some policies limit their use for evaluation and discipline. Transactional myopia—seeing at the case rather than the systemic level—leads to a focus on specific footage for particular cases, rather than the potential of aggregated body camera big data to reveal important systemic information and to prevent the escalation of problems.

随身摄像机、大数据和警察问责制
警察随身携带的摄像机数据的增加可以揭示以前不透明的做法。本文讨论了如何利用警用随身摄像机、市民录音和其他来源的视听大数据来解决警察监管中的盲点。基于美国最大城市的随身相机政策,它讨论了两个可能的障碍:(1)数据保留和删除,(2)用于评估和纪律的限制。尽管为刑事起诉保留录音,但为监督和问责保留录音却被忽视或存在争议。有些部门没有针对警方民事诉讼的录像政策。非证据记录的保留时间也短得多。一些政策限制了它们在评估和纪律方面的使用。交易性近视——只看案件而不是系统层面——导致人们只关注特定案件的特定镜头,而不是汇总随身相机大数据来揭示重要的系统信息和防止问题升级的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
53
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