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Accountability by camera : online video's effects on police-civilian interactions / Douglas A. Kelly.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Kelly, Douglas A., 1963- author.
Series:
Criminal justice (LFB Scholarly Publishing LLC)
Criminal Justice : Recent Scholarship
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Police-community relations.
Imaging systems.
Video recordings.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (317 pages).
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
El Paso, Texas : LFB Scholarly Publishing LLC, 2014.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Online video can bypass police jurisdictional influence over traditional mass media and may be affecting police-civilian interactions in American public space as the initial cusp of a paradigm shift. Where a camera may have videorecorded police actions, exclusive police custody of that camera or its recording correlates with the video being lost, destroyed, reported as nonexistent, or concealed from the public. Where police destroy, falsify, fail to file, or omit data from required documentation, online video correlates with improved accountability through police disciplinary actions. Online video correlates with significantly higher civil suit settlements for police misconduct.
Contents:
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Context and precedents
Police-civilian interaction and photography
Relevant legal issues
Adoption of photographic technology, 1839-1979
Adoption of electronic imaging technology, 1929-2010
Youtube's significance and operation
Research plan and process
Preliminary concepts
Document search and acquisition procedures
Generalizing to theory
Case studies
Case study I: Santo, Bush, Rivieri, 2007-07-01
Case study II: Ismail, Long, Pogan, 2008-07-25
Case study III: Hurlbut, smoker, trolley guards, 2009-09-05
Case study IV: Vargas et al., Grant, Mehserle, 2009-01-01
Case study V: anonymous, Morales, Pigott, 2008-09-24
Case study VI: Morris, Monetti, Cobane, 2010-04-17
Case study VII: Quodomine, Shariff, 2008-10-26
Case study VIII: Hakel, McCarren, Ashton et al., 2005-04-15
Case study IX: Glik, Cunniffe et al., 2007-10-01
Case study X: Winter, McKenna, Baker et al., 2010-03-04
Case study XI: Williams et al., Chapman et al., 2009-08-20
Case study XII: Bushwick 32, Nypd, 2007-05-01
Case study XIII: ninja636b, Rodriguez, Sousa, 2006-09-03
Case study xiv: Graber, Uhler et al., 2010-03-05
Emergent patterns and new theories
Theory one
Theory two
Theory three
References
Case citations
Appendix
Index.
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9781593327743
1593327749
OCLC:
881887726

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