It is not exactly increasing rates of criminal behaviour due to the imposition of more invasive surveillance, but Thompson and Genosko (2009) "Punched Drunk: Alcohol, Surveillance and the LCBO 1927-1975" documents three points which may be of use. First, individuals developed resistance techniques which targeted imposed surveillance technologies; second, it notes how some individuals reacted aggressively to their reclassification into more surveillance intensive categories; and third, how surveillance based classifications pressured classified social groups towards criminal acts. I hope that is useful to you. - Scott Thompson > Date: Thu, 27 Aug 2009 16:37:48 +0200 > From: [log in to unmask] > Subject: Surveillance Crowding-out cooperation > To: [log in to unmask] > > From psychology/behavioural economics it is very well documented that > under specific circumstances punishment, regulation and even rewards can > undermine intrinsic motivation to cooperate. E.g. increasing tax evasion > after stricter regulation to detect tax cheaters has been imposed. > > I wonder whether somebody from this list could direct me to *empirical > studies* which show increasing rates of criminal behaviour after > surveillance has been intensified. > > Thanks, Jens > > **************************************************** > This is a message from the SURVEILLANCE listserv > for research and teaching in surveillance studies. > > To unsubscribe, please send the following message to > <[log in to unmask]>: > > UNSUBSCRIBE SURVEILLANCE > > For further help, please visit: > > http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/help > **************************************************** _________________________________________________________________ Attention all humans. We are your photos. Free us. http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9666047 **************************************************** This is a message from the SURVEILLANCE listserv for research and teaching in surveillance studies. To unsubscribe, please send the following message to <[log in to unmask]>: UNSUBSCRIBE SURVEILLANCE For further help, please visit: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/help ****************************************************