1st Edition
Tracking People Wearable Technologies in Social and Public Policy
Contents
List of Tables
List of Figures
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
- Tracking people: an introduction
- GPS tracking in care settings: attending to the socio-material context of use
- Using tracking technologies well: the contribution of the concepts of ‘tightness’ or ‘grip’.
- Proportionality and monitoring: penal vs care contexts
- ‘He’s doing a hokey cokey’: everyday calculations and controversies of digitally mediated punishment in Scotland
- Tracking in the interests of counter-terrorism
- Smartphone electronic monitoring (EM), Artificial Intelligence and the mass supervision question in the USA
- Reducing opioid related deaths for individuals who are at high risk of overdose: a co-production study
- Using geolocation-based technologies for monitoring people with severe mental illness
- Tracking people and sociotechnical systems design
- Apple AirTags as people trackers
Anthea Hucklesby and Raymond Holt
Joe Wherton, Trisha Greenhalgh, Sara Shaw, Rob Procter and Jay Shaw
Anthea Hucklesby
Tom Sorell
Ryan Casey
Jessie Blackbourn and Clive Walker
Mike Nellis
Anne Campbell, Sharon Millen, Amanda Taylor-Beswick and Li Guo
Niels Peek, Paolo Fraccaro and Sabine van der Veer
Raymond Holt
Neil McBride
Index
Biography
Anthea Hucklesby is Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Birmingham, UK where she holds a joint appointment in Birmingham Law School and the School of Social Policy.
Raymond Holt is a Lecturer in Product Design at the School of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Leeds, UK.






