Article

Criminal Investigation Through the Eye of the Detective: Technological Innovation and Tradition

Details

Citation

Miranda D (2015) Criminal Investigation Through the Eye of the Detective: Technological Innovation and Tradition. Surveillance and Society, 13 ( 3/4), pp. 422-436. https://doi.org/10.24908/ss.v13i3/4.5403

Abstract
Technological elements and scientific knowledge are steadily transforming both the traditional image of the detective and the nature of contemporary police work. However, despite the potential utility of scientific methods and new technologies in criminal investigations, there are many barriers surrounding their application. We explore these barriers through a qualitative and comprehensive methodology, utilising a set of semi-structured interviews and informal conversations with criminal investigators. We use theoretical contributions from social studies of science and technology, Surveillance Studies and policing research to analyse how soft and hard forms of surveillance are applied in the practices of the Portuguese Criminal Investigation Police (Polícia Judiciária). The technological artefacts are both shaped by and shape how criminal investigators work. Consequently, it is necessary to explore how the collectives of human and non-human elements are constituted. By analysing the fusion of traditional methods of criminal investigation (hard surveillance) with new technologies of collection and use of information (soft surveillance) we see a hybrid figure of the contemporary detective emerging; a product of both the past and the present. In a context where innovation is sometimes constrained, traditional methods continue to endure. Nevertheless, the expansion of computerisation and police databases has had significant impact on how police information is collected and recorded.

Keywords
criminal investigation; identification science; surveillance technology;

Journal
Surveillance and Society: Volume 13, Issue 3/4

StatusPublished
FundersFundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia
Publication date31/12/2015
Publication date online26/10/2015
Date accepted by journal04/06/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/34213
ISSN1477-7487

People (1)

Dr Diana Miranda

Dr Diana Miranda

Senior Lecturer, Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology

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