Electric-Shock Weapons, Tasers and Policing

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A01=Abi Dymond
Author_Abi Dymond
Category=JB
Electric-shock technologies
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Force Option
HMIC
Home Affairs Select Committee
human rights policing
Independent Police Complaints Commission
IPCC 2014a
Irritant Spray
Lethal Force
Lethal Weapons
Mr Farmer
National Police Chief Council
NDM
NGO Report
Non-human agency
non-lethal weapon effects
NPCC
officer decision making
Police Accountability
police accountability studies
Police Culture
Police Discretion
Police Firearms
Police Forces
Police Sub-culture
Police Subculture
Police Use of Force
Science and Technology Studies
science technology policing
socio-legal analysis
Socio-technical Network
TASER
TASER International
TASER Training
UN
United Nations Human Rights Office
use of force research
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032134598
  • Weight: 320g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Building on five years of research, and drawing on criminology, science and technology studies (STS), socio-legal studies and social psychology, this book is the first non-medical book written on electric-shock weapons, of which the best well known is the TASER brand.

The police’s ability to use force is one of their most crucial powers, yet one that has been relatively neglected by criminology. This book challenges some of the myths surrounding the use of these weapons and considers their human rights implications and impact on members of the public and officers alike. Drawing on STS, it also considers the role and impact of electric-shock technologies, examines the extent to which technologies and non-human agency may also play a role in shaping officer decision making and discretion, and contributes to long standing debates about police accountability.

This is essential reading for policing scholars around the world, particularly those engaged with use of force, culture and accountability, as well as those engaged with Science and Technology studies.

Abi Dymond is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology in the Sociology, Philosophy and Anthropology Department at the University of Exeter. Prior to joining academia, she worked for over ten years for various human rights and international development NGOs, including the Omega Research Foundation.

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