The Intensification of Surveillance: Crime, Terrorism and Warfare in the Information Age
edited by Kirstie Ball and Frank Webster
Pluto Press, 2003 Cloth: 978-0-7453-1995-7 | Paper: 978-0-7453-1994-0 Library of Congress Classification JC596.I58 2003 Dewey Decimal Classification 363.252
TOC
TABLE OF CONTENTS
The Intensification of Surveillance: Crime, Terrorism and Warfare in the Information Era
Kirstie Ball and Frank Webster
Acknowledgements
This book was produced following a conference entitled 'The intensification of surveillance: Implications for crime, terrorism and warfare' in held at the University of Birmingham in March 2002. The editors would like to thank the Birmingham Business School and the University of Birmingham School of Social Science for funding and hosting the conference. They would also like to thank the conference participants for their comments.
Contents
1. The intensification of surveillance
Kirstie Ball and Frank Webster
2. Surveillance after September 11th
David Lyon
3. Data - mining and surveillance in the post 9-11
environment
Oscar Gandy
4. Joined - up surveillance?
Charles Raab
5. 'They Don't Even Know We're There': The Electronic
Monitoring of Offenders In England and Wales
Mike Nellis
6. Information warfare, surveillance and human rights
Frank Webster
7. Mapping out Cybercrimes in a Cyberspatial Surveillant
Assemblage
David Wall
8. The constant state of emergency? Surveillance after 9/11
David Wood, Eli Konvitz and Kirstie Ball
Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication:
The Intensification of Surveillance: Crime, Terrorism and Warfare in the Information Era
Kirstie Ball and Frank Webster
Acknowledgements
This book was produced following a conference entitled 'The intensification of surveillance: Implications for crime, terrorism and warfare' in held at the University of Birmingham in March 2002. The editors would like to thank the Birmingham Business School and the University of Birmingham School of Social Science for funding and hosting the conference. They would also like to thank the conference participants for their comments.
Contents
1. The intensification of surveillance
Kirstie Ball and Frank Webster
2. Surveillance after September 11th
David Lyon
3. Data - mining and surveillance in the post 9-11
environment
Oscar Gandy
4. Joined - up surveillance?
Charles Raab
5. 'They Don't Even Know We're There': The Electronic
Monitoring of Offenders In England and Wales
Mike Nellis
6. Information warfare, surveillance and human rights
Frank Webster
7. Mapping out Cybercrimes in a Cyberspatial Surveillant
Assemblage
David Wall
8. The constant state of emergency? Surveillance after 9/11
David Wood, Eli Konvitz and Kirstie Ball
Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: