Academic team: Mike Rowe (Northumbria University), Matt Jones (CPRL), Andrew Millie (Edge Hill University)
Policing partners: College of Policing, Greater Manchester Police, West Yorkshire Police, Lancashire Constabulary and Cumbria Constabulary
Status: Complete
In policy terms, visibility in policing has been primarily addressed in narrow terms regarding the potential for patrol officers. This project is the first to explore the visual culture of contemporary policing. Drawing on visual sociology and visual criminology, it applies theories and methodologies of the visual to the sociology of policing.
The project focuses on the symbolic power of police stations, the symbolic properties of police material culture (including ceremonial uniforms, flags, badges, tourist souvenirs, and children's toys), and the visibility of the police in social media, incorporating official and unofficial police accounts.
It explores the structure and communicative impact of different forms of police presence and visibility, the role of visual, symbolic and material artefacts in forging the organisational and cultural, new and emerging forms of police visibility on social media, and the implications of project findings for policy and practice.
Title | Outputs type | Lead academic | Year | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Visible policing | Short video documentary | Project team | 2022 | |
Visible policing | Project website | Rowe, M | 2019 |
Dr Paul Walley and Dr Helen Glasspoole-Bird have published an evaluation report entitled “An Evaluation of the Pilot Application of Artificial Intelligence to Witness Statement and Report Generation at Hertfordshire Constabulary”. The work studies the outputs of version 1 of an AI application that takes audio from Rapid Video Response interviews with victims of domestic abuse and converts this into relevant summary documents including MG11 witness statements.