Caught on camera


Autoria(s): Dee, Mike
Data(s)

01/06/1995

Resumo

The emergence of shopping malls in Europe, the UK and Australia over the last thirty years or so, raises questions about the disruptive effects of such capital intensive developments on local area shopping facilities, transport and other infrastructures and the maintenance of artificially high prices for goods, whereby the promised greater choice of shops and prices is rarely a genuine free market of competition leading to lower prices. A central question to be addressed is whom these centres represent and belong to. While many claim to exist to ‘serve the community’ almost all malls and centres are private property and the community of shoppers has few, if any rights compared with the conventional high street, which is a public thoroughfare. This permits the management of the centres through their own private security staff, to observe, follow, eject and refuse further admission to anyone considered to be ‘undesirable’. What is different about the newest shopping centres is the routine use of increasingly sophisticated CCTV surveillance equipment to observe and record, for later evidential and entry restriction use, the movements of centre visitors.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/61815/

Publicador

UK National Youth Agency

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/61815/2/61815.pdf

Dee, Mike (1995) Caught on camera. Young People Now, pp. 18-19.

Direitos

Copyright 1995 [please consult the author]

Fonte

Faculty of Health; School of Public Health & Social Work

Palavras-Chave #160206 Private Policing and Security Services #160810 Urban Sociology and Community Studies #Young people #CCTV #Shopping mall #Police #Surveillance
Tipo

Journal Article