Crime, Surveillance, and Communities
Crime, Surveillance and Communities, 40 Fordham URB. L.J . 959 (2013).
Camille Nelson
Timing is everything. I started reading Crime, Surveillance and Communities in the midst of the unrest in Ferguson, Missouri. The community north of St. Louis was the site of civil unrest in the wake of the shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager. I could say that Prof. Capers’ article, which explores the use of technological surveillance as a mechanism to police the police, is prescient. However, given […]
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