Technology in policing, policing in a technological society. Special Issue brief
Published date | 01 September 2023 |
DOI | http://doi.org/10.1177/14613557231200984 |
Author | Matthias Wienroth |
Date | 01 September 2023 |
Subject Matter | Special Issue: Technology in Policing |
Technology in policing, policing in a
technological society. Special Issue brief
Matthias Wienroth
Centre for Crime and Policing, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Abstract
Watson and Huey, in a 2020 article in this Journal, point out that there is still little empirical research offering a practice-
focused perspective. This Special Issue responds to that call by offering a variety of empirically and theoretically informed
studies centred on technology use in the policing of crime, borders and society more widely (e.g. surveillance).
Contributions are inspired by Adam Crawford’s insightful notion of policing ‘as a product of new technologies’and
Andrew Barry’sreflective analysis of technical practices and devices as integral elements of organising and governing a
‘technological society’. These inspirations reflect the interplay of policing requirements and practices, and the develop-
ment, deployment and governance of technologies. A vital element of understanding and managing policing is the
study of how technologies are imagined, adopted and overseen, to contribute to the understanding and anticipation of
changing policing practices and needs. Two key elements are addressed in this Special Issue: (a) technological knowledge
production, and the shaping of such knowledge in policing practices and institutional cultures, informing discourses on
intelligence-led policing and evidence-based policing; and (b) the role of technology in creating legitimacy for policing.
Eight contributions provide analyses of ‘technology in policing as it happens’in practice-relevant case studies and reflec-
tions on developments. They address a broad spread of technologies, including drones, artificial intelligence firearms,
forensic applications and social media. In attending to these examples, the authors shed light on vital aspects of policing
that have so far been underexplored, using a mix of approaches from the social studies of science and technology, and
from sociology/criminology. To ensure accessibility to a variety of reader groups, each ar ticle includes a section highlight-
ing lessons learnt for understanding the policing in a technological society. This Special Issue is the first in the International
Journal of Police Science & Management to bring a comprehensive discussion of technology to the Journal’s audience. At the
same time, it opens up the Journal’s interests in policing to wider audiences, including those in science, technology and
innovation studies, as well as criminology, by innovatively merging the interests of the three in the subject of its contributions.
Contributing authors analyse and evaluate the opportunities and challenges of technology in policing with those for policing in a
technological society. In doing so, the complexity of the relationship of technology and policing is made accessible, evidencing
that, as Timmermans and Berg wrote, technology is always ‘technology-in-practice’. Context is vital, technology is not necessarily
used as intended, and its application cannot be considered neutral but must be understood as in interplay with diverse other
knowledge practices (investigatory, prosecutorial, judicial, institutional, societal, etc.). This Special Issue is a starting point and
call to continue work on supporting deliberation, widening the scope of perspectives to be involved, and seeking communication
and collaboration across institutional and disciplinary boundaries: tearing down forts (silos) and building fords (crossings).
Keywords
technology, policing, democratic policing, legitimacy, practice
Submitted 14 Jul 2023, accepted 25 Aug 2023
Introduction
In a recent contribution to this Journal, Watson and Huey
(2020) point to the added complexities that adoption of tech-
nology into policing practices can bring. This adoption issue
Corresponding author:
Matthias Wienroth, Centre for Crime and Policing, Northumbria
University, Squires Building, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST, UK.
Emails: matthias.wienroth@northumbria.ac.uk; m.wienroth@gmail.com
Special Issue: Technology in Policing
International Journal of
Police Science & Management
2023, Vol. 25(3) 223–225
© The Author(s) 2023
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DOI: 10.1177/14613557231200984
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