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Electronic monitoring (EM) is a way of supervising offenders in the
community whilst they are on bail, serving a community sentence or
after release from prison. Various technologies can be used,
including voice verification, GPS satellite tracking and - most
commonly - the use of radio frequency to monitor house arrest. It
originated in the USA in the 1980s and has spread to over 30
countries since then. This book explores the development of EM in a
number of countries to give some indication of the diverse ways it
has been utilized and of the complex politics which surrounds its
use. A techno-utopian impulse underpins the origins of EM and has
remained latent in its subsequent development elsewhere in the
world, despite recognition that is it less capable of effecting
penal transformations than its champions have hoped. This book
devotes substantive chapters to the issues of privatisation,
evaluation, offender perspectives and ethics. Whilst normatively
more committed to the Swedish model, the book acknowledges that
this may not represent the future of EM, whose untrammelled,
commercially-driven development could have very alarming
consequences for criminal justice. Both utopian and dystopian hopes
have been invested in EM, but research on its impact is ambivalent
and fragmented, and EM remains undertheorised, empirically and
ethically. This book seeks to redress this by providing academics,
policy audiences and practitioners with the intellectual resources
to understand and address the challenges which EM poses.
Electronic monitoring (EM) is a way of supervising offenders in the
community whilst they are on bail, serving a community sentence or
after release from prison. Various technologies can be used,
including voice verification, GPS satellite tracking and - most
commonly - the use of radio frequency to monitor house arrest. It
originated in the USA in the 1980s and has spread to over 30
countries since then. This book explores the development of EM in a
number of countries to give some indication of the diverse ways it
has been utilized and of the complex politics which surrounds its
use. A techno-utopian impulse underpins the origins of EM and has
remained latent in its subsequent development elsewhere in the
world, despite recognition that is it less capable of effecting
penal transformations than its champions have hoped. This book
devotes substantive chapters to the issues of privatisation,
evaluation, offender perspectives and ethics. Whilst normatively
more committed to the Swedish model, the book acknowledges that
this may not represent the future of EM, whose untrammelled,
commercially-driven development could have very alarming
consequences for criminal justice. Both utopian and dystopian hopes
have been invested in EM, but research on its impact is ambivalent
and fragmented, and EM remains undertheorised, empirically and
ethically. This book seeks to redress this by providing academics,
policy audiences and practitioners with the intellectual resources
to understand and address the challenges which EM poses.
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