Mass data surveillance and predictive policing

£45.99

Mass data surveillance and predictive policing

Contested Foundations and Human Rights Impact

Sociology Police and security services Crime and criminology Systems of law Legal aspects of criminology Public international law: human rights Criminal justice law Police law and police procedures Data protection law Intellectual property law Social law and Medical law Digital and information technologies: social and ethical aspects Digital and information technologies: Legal aspects Privacy and data protection Computer science

Author: Plixavra Vogiatzoglou

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Collection: Routledge Frontiers of Criminal Justice

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 29th January 2025

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9781040303856


Overview

This book critically assesses legal frameworks involving the bulk processing of personal data, initially collected by the private sector, to predict and prevent crime through advanced profiling technologies. In the European Union (EU), mass data surveillance currently engages three sectors: electronic communications (under the e-Privacy Directive), air travelling (under the Passenger Name Records Directive), and finance (under the Anti-Money Laundering Directive), and increasingly intersects with the deployment of predictive policing techniques. The book questions the legitimacy and impact of these frameworks in light of the EU’s powers to provide security while safeguarding fundamental rights, particularly privacy, data protection, effective remedy, fair trial, and presumption of innocence.

Focus and Challenges

Focusing on the security shift towards forestalling crime before it occurs, the book identifies its distinct characteristics, such as the blurred lines between the public and private sector actors, and interrogates whether the legal bases and traditional theories on security can account for it. The book further explores the challenges these pre-crime practices pose, including their questionable effectiveness and the ambiguous application of human rights safeguards in situations where no crime has been committed, yet individuals face consequences as a result of deploying predictive analytics on mass amounts of commercially collected personal data. In examining the interference with several fundamental rights, the book also highlights aspects neglected by the jurisprudence of the Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Court of Human Rights, such as the expansive nature and the collective and cumulative effects of these frameworks.

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