
The proliferation of data-driven criminal justice operations creates millions of criminal records each year in the United States. Documenting everything from a police stop to a prison sentence, these records take on a digital life of their own as they are collected by law enforcement and courts, posted on government websites, re-posted on social media, online news and mugshot galleries, and bought and sold by data brokers. The result is digital punishment, where mere suspicion or a brush with the law can have lasting consequences. In Digital Punishment, Sarah Esther Lageson unpacks criminal recordkeeping in the digital age, as busy and overburdened criminal justice agencies turned to technological solutions offered by IT companies over the last two decades. These operations produce a mountain of data, including the names, photographs, and home addresses of people arrested or charged with a crime, transforming millions of paper records into a digital commodity. Regardless of factual or legal guilt, these records rapidly multiply across the private sector background checking and personal data industries. Emboldened by public records laws designed for paper-based systems, criminal record data has become an extremely valuable resource for employers, landlords, and communities to monitor criminal behavior and assess other people. But while transparency laws were originally designed to allow governmental watchdogging, digital punishment has redirected our gaze toward one another. Hundreds of interviews detailed in this book reveal the consequences of digital punishment, as people purposefully opt out of society to cope with privacy and due process violations. As criminal histories impact nearly every aspect of private and civic life, the collateral consequences of even the most minor records are much more than barriers to employment and housing. For the criminal record-holder, the messy entanglement of government bureaucracy is nothing compared to the jurisdiction-less ha
How does the digitization of criminal records transform the nature of punishment and social surveillance in the United States? Sarah Esther Lageson, a sociologist and expert in criminal justice, investigates the intersection of government recordkeeping and private data brokerage. She argues that the transition from paper-based systems to digital databases has created a permanent, accessible, and often inaccurate record that functions as a form of ongoing, extra-legal punishment for individuals regardless of their actual guilt or innocence.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and policy analysts frequently cite this work as a critical examination of the unintended consequences of transparency laws in the digital era. Experts highlight the text for its rigorous qualitative research and its ability to bridge the gap between sociological theory and the lived realities of those navigating the modern criminal justice system.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190872012
ISBN-13:
9780190872014
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