Punishment and Surveillance Flashcards
What is surveillance?
Refers to the monitoring of public’s behaviour for the purpose of controlling and preventing crime. It is carried out through technology - CCTV, etc.
What are the 2 forms of punishment according to Foucault?
Soverign power and disciplinary power.
What is sovereign power? (Foucault)
The monarch had the power over people’s bodies so inflicting punishment on the body, e.g. branding, amputation or disfigurement, was a sign of control.
What is disciplinary power? (Foucault)
Seeks to govern the body and mind through surveillance. It turns surveillance into self-surveillance. This has pervaded every aspect of society (schools, workplaces..).
What is the aim of disciplinary power? (Foucault)
To rehabilitate the offender through intensive monitoring.
What was the Panopticon? (Foucault)
Prison system designed by Jeremny Bentham. The prison was designed to have the guards in the centre, they could see any cell at any time, but prisoner can’t see them. The few can see the many - prisoners do not know if they are being watched, but know they might be. Surveillance turns into self-surveliiance and discipline turns into self-discipline - control takes place inside the prisoner.
What is discplinary power a form of? (Foucault)
A form of carseral archmelago - ‘prison islands’. Through which professionals such as teachers, doctors, etc. exercise surveillance over the population.
What is electronic panopticon? (Foucault)
Modern technology is ised to monitor us, e.g. CCTV.
What is the evaluation of Foucault’s theory on surveillance?
Assumes that retirbutive, expressive punishment disappear in modern society.
Exaggerates the extent of control over individuals.
CCTV is a from of surveillance, after a while people get used to it and their behaviour reverts back to normal.
CCTV can be accused of disciplinary crime and bring an electronic form of male gaze.
How does Goffman criticise Foulcault’s theory on surveillance?
Prison inmates and mental health patients can resist control.
What does Mathiesan argue about media and surveillance?
The media enable the few to see the many thus surveillance from below takes place. He calls this synopticon - where veryone watches everyone.
Why do politicians fear media surveillance? (Mathiesan)
As it may discover information that would damage their career - social control of behaviour.
How do cyclists maintain road safety? (Mathiesan)
Cyclists monitoring members of the public through helmet cameras in case of traffic incidents. This makes road users exercise self-discipline.
How can the public control the controllers? (Mathiesan)
By filming police wrongdoing. Mann et al calls the sousveillance - surveillance from below.
What is the evaluation of Mathiesan’s theory on surveillance?
Synopticon and surveillance cannot always reverse established hierachies of surveillance.
Under anti-terrorism laws the police have the power to confiscate the cameras and phones of citizen jounalists.
What does Haggerty and Ericson argue about surveillance?
Foucault argued that surveillance involves the manipulation of bodies in confined spaces such as prisons. Haggerty and Ericson argues that today surveillance involves the manipulation of virtual objects (digital data) in cyber space.
What are surveillant assemblages? (Haggerty and Ericson)
Different technologies being combined, e.g CCTV is analysed using facial recognition software to monitor individuals.
How is new technology different to Foucault’s disciplinarian power? (Feeley and Simon)
- It focuses on groups, not indivduals.
- It is not interested in rehabilitating them, just preventing them from offending.
- It uses calculations of risk called actuarial analysis which calculates the risk of an event happening, e.g. young drivers’ risk of having a traffic collison.
What is the purpose of surveillance? (Feeley and Simon)
Not rehabilitation, it is to predict and prevent future offending. It does so by applying surveillance techniques to identify, classify and manage groups of levels of dangerousness.