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Policing Advance Access first published online on June 5, 2008
This version published online on June 17, 2008

Policing, doi:10.1093/police/pan017
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© The Authors 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of CSF Associates: Publius, Inc. All rights reserved. For permissions please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Technology and Policing: Implications for Fairness and Legitimacy

Peter Neyroud* and Emma Disley**

* Chief Executive, National Policing Improvement Agency, London, UK. E-mail: Peter.Neyroud{at}npia.pnn.police.uk
** DPhil student, Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford

In this article, Peter Neyroud, Chief Executive of the NPIA, and Emma Disley, DPhil student at the Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford, argue that factual questions about the effectiveness of new technologies (such as DNA evidence, mobile identification technologies and computer databases) in detecting and preventing crime should not, and cannot, be separated from ethical and social questions surrounding the impact which these technologies might have upon civil liberties. This is due to the close inter-relationship between the effectiveness of the police and public perceptions of police legitimacy—which may potentially be damaged if new technologies are not deployed carefully. The authors argue that strong, transparent management and oversight of these technologies are essential, and suggest some factors to which a regime of governance should attend.


This article presents the substance of Peter Neyroud's Sir Leon Radzinowicz Visiting Fellowship Lecture at the University of Cambridge, May 2008.

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