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Human rights requirements for person-based predictive policing

open access: diamondTechnology and Regulation, 2022
The article addresses human rights requirements for person-based predictive policing. It looks into human rights standards, as elaborated in the selected European Court of Human Rights case law on creating police databases, watchlists and registries,
Zuzanna Warso
doaj   +4 more sources

Predictive Policing in China

open access: diamondNaveiñ Reet: Nordic Journal of Law and Social Research, 2020
China’s public security forces are employing more and more technology in their push for an ‘informatization (信息化)’ of their police work. The application of analytical techniques for solving past crimes or preventing future crimes based on big data ...
Daniel Sprick
doaj   +4 more sources

Runaway Feedback Loops in Predictive Policing [PDF]

open access: green, 2017
Predictive policing systems are increasingly used to determine how to allocate police across a city in order to best prevent crime. Discovered crime data (e.g., arrest counts) are used to help update the model, and the process is repeated.
Ensign, Danielle   +4 more
core   +2 more sources

The 'uberization of policing'? How police negotiate and operationalise predictive policing technology [PDF]

open access: goldPolicing and Society, 2020
<p>Predictive policing generally refers to police work that utilises strategies, algorithmic technologies, and big data to generate near-future predictions about the people and places deemed likely to be involved in or experience crime. Claimed benefits of predictive policing centre on the technology’s ability to enable pre-emptive police work by
Ajay Sandhu, Peter Fussey
openaire   +4 more sources

The Impact of Biometric Surveillance on Reducing Violent Crime: Strategies for Apprehending Criminals While Protecting the Innocent [PDF]

open access: yesSensors
In the rapidly evolving landscape of biometric technologies, integrating artificial intelligence (AI) and predictive analytics offers promising opportunities and significant challenges for law enforcement and violence prevention.
Patricia Haley
doaj   +2 more sources

Beyond Effectiveness: Legitimising Predictive Policing in Germany

open access: greenKriminologie - Das Online-Journal, 2020
There is no conclusive evidence that predictive policing is effective in reducing crime. Further, our interview partners, the representatives of the scientific-analytic branches of three German state police forces, do not claim that their predictive ...
Libuše Hannah Vepřek   +4 more
doaj   +2 more sources

Detecting and Monitoring Hate Speech in Twitter [PDF]

open access: yesSensors, 2019
Social Media are sensors in the real world that can be used to measure the pulse of societies. However, the massive and unfiltered feed of messages posted in social media is a phenomenon that nowadays raises social alarms, especially when these messages ...
Juan Carlos Pereira-Kohatsu   +3 more
doaj   +7 more sources

Predictive Policing [PDF]

open access: yesInformatik Spektrum, 2021
This chapter addresses predictive policing, which is a term that refers to a range of crime-fighting approaches that use crime mapping data and analysis, and, more recently, social network analysis, big data, and predictive algorithms. The rise of predictive policing, especially in many police jurisdictions in large cities in the USA, has raised the ...
Roman Povalej, Dirk Volkmann
openaire   +2 more sources

Predictive Policing and Crime Control in The United States of America and Europe: Trends in a Decade of Research and the Future of Predictive Policing

open access: yesSocial Sciences, 2021
There has been a significant focus on predictive policing systems, as law enforcement agents embrace modern technology to forecast criminal activity.
Ishmael Mugari, Emeka E. Obioha
doaj   +1 more source

Predictive policing in the context of road traffic safety: A systematic review and theoretical considerations

open access: yesTransportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives, 2021
Road traffic collisions are responsible for 1.35 million deaths per year in the World. Moreover, they are the main cause of death for young people. To reduce the hazardous impact of road traffic crashes, it is necessary to constantly improve road traffic
Sven Sieveneck, Christine Sutter
doaj   +1 more source

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