Abstract
Preface 1. Introduction: technocrime, Stephane Leman-Langlois (University of Montreal) 2. Crime and lawfulness in the age of the all-seeing techno-humanity, David Brin (formerly of the California Space Institute) 3. The local impact of police videosurveillance on the social construction of security, Stephane Leman-Langlois (University of Montreal) 4. Cyberwars and cybercrime, Benoit Gagnon (University of Montreal) 5. Policing through nodes, clusters and bandwidth, Johnny Nhan (University of California, Irvine) and Laura Huey (Concordia University, Montreal) 6. Second Life and governing deviance in virtual worlds, Jennifer Whitson (Carleton University, Ottawa) and Aaron Doyle (Carleton University, Ottawa) 7. Privacy as currency: crime, information and control in cyberspace, Stephane Leman-Langlois (University of Montreal) 8. Information technology in criminal intelligence a comparative perspective, Frederic Lemieux (University of Montreal) 9. Scientific policing and criminal investigation, Jean-Paul Brodeur (University of Montreal) 10. Sorting systems: identification by database, David Lyon (Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario) 11. A view of surveillance, Peter K. Manning (Northeastern University, Boston) 12. Afterword: technopolice, Stephane Leman-Langlois (University of Montreal)
Published Version
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