
Tracking People
Wearable Technologies in Social and Public Policy
- 238 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Tracking People
Wearable Technologies in Social and Public Policy
About this book
Tracking technologies are now ubiquitous and are part of many people's everyday lives. Large sections of the population voluntarily use devices and apps to track fitness, medical conditions, sleep, vital signs or their own or others' whereabouts. Governments, health services, immigration and criminal justice agencies increasingly rely upon tracking technologies to monitor individuals' whereabouts, behaviour, medical conditions and interventions. Despite the human rights concerns of some organisations and individuals, most wearers and their significant others tend to welcome the technologies. This paradox is only one of the many fascinating challenges raised by the widespread use of tracking technologies which are explored in this book.
This book critically explores the ethical, legal, social, and technical issues arising from the current and future use of tracking technologies. It provides a unique and wide-ranging discussion, via a cross-disciplinary collection of essays, on issues relating to technological devices and apps whose use is imposed upon wearers or suggested by others, whether agencies or individuals, including in the domains of criminal justice, terrorism, and health and social care. Contributions from leading academics from across social sciences, engineering, computer and data science, philosophy, and health and social care address the diverse uses of tracking technologies including with individuals with dementia, defendants and offenders, individuals with mental health conditions and drug users alongside legal, ethical and normative questions about the appropriate use of these technologies. Cross-disciplinary themes emerge focusing on both the benefits of the technologies – freedom, improved safety, security, well-being and autonomy, and increased capacity of and efficiencies for public services – and the challenges – implementation and operational costs, mission creep, privacy concerns, stigmatisation, whether the technologies work as expected, and useability and wearability for all wearers.
This book is essential reading for academics and students engaged in criminology, criminal justice, socio-legal studies, science and technology studies, medicine, health and social care, psychology, engineering, computer and data science, philosophy, social policy and social work and security studies. It will also be of great interest to policy-makers, regulators, practitioners already deploying or considering using tracking technologies, and to current and potential wearers.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Tracking people: an introduction
- 2 GPS tracking in care settings: attending to the socio-material context of use
- 3 Using tracking technologies well: the contribution of the concepts of ‘tightness’ or ‘grip’
- 4 Proportionality and monitoring: penal versus care contexts
- 5 ‘He's doing a hokey cokey’: everyday calculations and controversies of digitally mediated punishment in Scotland
- 6 Tracking in the interests of counter-terrorism
- 7 Smartphone electronic monitoring (EM), artificial intelligence and the mass supervision question in the USA137
- 8 Reducing opioid related deaths for individuals who are at high risk of overdose: a co-production study
- 9 Using geolocation-based technologies for monitoring people with severe mental illness
- 10 Tracking people and sociotechnical systems design
- 11 Apple AirTags as people trackers
- Index