Surveillance Policy Making by Procurement

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW
Catherine Crump
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

The Seattle police obtained a surveillance drone with the approval of a city council that did not realize what it was doing. Following a council review that lasted literally two minutes, Oakland created a data integration center that networked together all of the city’s existing surveillance infrastructure. In San Diego, elected representatives were only dimly aware that the law enforcement agency they supervised had built and deployed innovative facial recognition technology.In an age of heightened concern about the militarization of local police and surveillance technology, how is it possible for local law enforcement agencies to obtain cutting edge and potentially intrusive surveillance equipment without elected leaders and the general public understanding what they are doing? The answer lies in the multi-billion-dollar process of federal procurement, through which the federal government, often in the name of combatting terrorism, funnels resources to local law enforcement agencies to purchase surveillance equipment. But the federal government does not take steps to ensure that local elected representatives and members of the public are involved in decisions about what technologies to acquire, or that anyone develops a protocol to constrain how the technologies are used. Surveillance policy making by procurement thus raises a host of questions related to accountability for policy choices when the federal government influences local policing through grants but does not address all relevant concerns, and how to deal with the inevitable spillover effects of the federal government’s national security initiatives on the ways local law enforcement agents carry out their more routine policing functions.This article is the first to comprehensively consider the intersection of procurement and local surveillance policy making. Using case studies from Seattle, Oakland, and San Diego, it exposes the practice of surveillance policy making by procurement. The case studies highlight the structural and institutional factors that lead to surveillance policy making by procurement, and elected representatives’ responses to it point the way towards policy solutions that would bring a greater measure of transparency and accountability to local surveillance policy making. The case studies also provide fodder for thinking through the way federal spending programs can generate confusion over who is responsible for policy choices, and how the federal government’s national security policies have spillover effects on the conduct of routine policing. Local communities vary greatly, in their crime rates, the competence and trustworthiness of their police departments, and in their political convictions. This article draws on the case studies to suggest that local governments have a valuable role to play in tailoring surveillance policy to local conditions. It concludes by proposing politically feasible steps to strengthen local democratic input regarding what surveillance technology should be adopted and the conditions under which it should be deployed.
采购监督政策制定
西雅图警方在市议会的批准下获得了一架监视无人机,但市议会并没有意识到它在做什么。在议会进行了大约两分钟的审查之后,奥克兰建立了一个数据集成中心,将该市现有的所有监控基础设施联网。在圣地亚哥,当选代表只是模模糊糊地意识到,他们监管的执法机构已经开发并部署了创新的面部识别技术。在一个对地方警察和监控技术军事化高度关注的时代,在没有民选领导人和公众了解他们在做什么的情况下,地方执法机构怎么可能获得尖端的、可能具有侵入性的监控设备?答案在于耗资数十亿美元的联邦采购过程,通过这一过程,联邦政府通常以打击恐怖主义的名义,向地方执法机构输送资源,以购买监控设备。但是,联邦政府没有采取措施,确保地方民选代表和公众成员参与决定获得何种技术,也没有人制定协议来限制这些技术的使用。因此,通过采购制定监督政策引发了一系列问题,如联邦政府通过拨款影响地方警务,但没有解决所有相关问题时,政策选择的问责制问题,以及如何处理联邦政府的国家安全举措对地方执法人员执行其更常规警务职能的方式产生的不可避免的溢出效应。这篇文章是第一个全面考虑采购和地方监督政策制定的交集。本文利用来自西雅图、奥克兰和圣地亚哥的案例研究,揭露了通过采购制定监督政策的做法。案例研究突出了导致采购监督政策制定的结构和体制因素,当选代表对此的反应指出了政策解决办法的方向,这些办法将为地方监督政策制定带来更大程度的透明度和问责制。这些案例研究也为思考联邦支出计划如何在谁对政策选择负责方面产生混乱,以及联邦政府的国家安全政策如何对日常警务行为产生溢出效应提供了素材。当地社区在犯罪率、警察部门的能力和可信度以及政治信念方面差异很大。本文通过案例研究表明,地方政府在根据当地情况制定监控政策方面可以发挥重要作用。最后,它提出了政治上可行的步骤,以加强地方民主对应采用何种监视技术以及应在何种条件下部署这种技术的投入。
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期刊介绍: Washington Law Review is a student-run and student-edited scholarly legal journal at the University of Washington School of Law. Inaugurated in 1919, it is the first legal journal published in the Pacific Northwest. Today, the Law Review publishes Articles and Comments of national and regional interest four times per year.
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