Foreword by David L. Altheide
Introduction: Media Logic, Policing, and Social Media
Chapter 1: Media Formats and Police Social Control Practices
Chapter 2: Crime and Society 2.0: Police and Social Networking
Chapter 3: Facebook and the 2011 Vancouver Riot
Chapter 4: Police Presentational Strategies on Twitter
Chapter 5: Police Caught on Camera: Framing the Death of Sammy
Yatim
Conclusion: Policing on Social Media
Christopher J. Schneider is associate professor of sociology at Brandon University.
This book is timely and of major importance given the increasingly
central role social media now occupies in global policing,
governance, and accountability discourses. […] the book should be
of urgent interest to a wide student, academic, and
professional readership, including those with a background in
policing, science and technology studies, communication studies,
cultural studies, criminology, and sociology.
*Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles*
Christopher Schneider’s Policing and Social Media: Social Control
in an Era of New Media offers an innovative look at how social
media has influenced policing practices in Canada.... Schneider’s
ground-breaking book […] is the first to trace the origins of
social media influence on policing strategies in Canada and raises
questions about the long-term implications that social media will
have on police conduct and transformations in police work.
Schneider’s work is unique in the diversity of approaches [where
he] cleverly examines three different social media formats and
their impacts on two of Canada’s largest police forces in three
concise and critically analyzed chapters. […] Schneider’s research
demonstrates the role of social media in challenging the
once-enjoyed police monopoly to make claims, define situations, and
control narratives.
*Surveillance & Society*
In light of the many high-profile and recent police shootings in
the United States, and the way that they were framed on YouTube and
other social media sites, this book is a significant contribution
on the field of policing and information.... [T]his book will be of
interest to academics - and people from within police institutions
- looking to learn more on social control in an era of new
media.
*American Review Of Canadian Studies*
In the concise and accessible Policing and Social Media: Social
Control in an Era of New Media, Christopher Schneider paints a
picture of the management, use, and control of social media by
police agencies in Canada.... This book provides important insight
into how law enforcement encountered and adopted social media as
central to police work… [A] major strength of the work is when
Schneider provides examples of original content produced on social
media platforms by Facebook users [where he] carefully analyzes
troves of content to highlight big-picture cultural meaning… The
accessibility and clarity of the book will spark new questions for
scholars.... This book is timely and relevant.
*Contemporary Sociology*
This is an original and important contribution … this book’s
theoretical contributions surely will influence future work across
disciplines. Policing and Social Media is essential reading for
scholars of media and crime … It surely would also appeal to anyone
with broad interests in social control, social change, social
institutions, and the sociocultural effects of new media.
*Symbolic Interaction*
Schneider is a recognized academic expert on social media, and . .
. he has done the Canadian public a great service in this book,
which explores the many ways that Canadian law enforcement bodies
are using their own social media presence to try to control public
perception of the police and of particular stories . . . Schneider
has done a fine job with this study, and anyone in Canada who cares
about policing, privacy, civil liberties, and personal freedom
should read it.
*Vancouver Sun*
Written for fellow scholars . . . this evaluation by a Brandon
University sociologist of how the social media revolution has
affected policing in Canada is surprisingly populist in its
framing.
*Maclean's Magazine*
Policing and Social Media breaks new ground in the analysis of how
technology is changing the public face of police work.
*Brandon University News*
Although focused on Canadian policing, I consider this book an
excellent foundational text for those interested more broadly in
contemporary police communications as well as the changing nature
of policing in general. The arguments are persuasive and help to
better understand the challenges police face as they enter this
social media environment.
*Canadian Journal of Communication*
Christopher Schneider’s Policing and Social Media takes the reader
deep inside the interplay of social communication and social
control. As he carefully documents, new openings for interactive
communication are emerging amidst the swirl of today’s social
media—but so are new, insidious forms of surveillance and
manipulation. An essential work on contemporary policing and
contemporary media, Schneider’s book brings critical social
analysis to bear on the most immediate of issues.
*Jeff Ferrell, Texas Christian University and University of
Kent*
Christopher Schneider’s groundbreaking new book takes studies of
the complex symbiosis between police and media into the era of
Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. The multiple perspectives of its
three case studies reveal how the logic of social media is already
transforming police practices, not only creating new challenges for
police, but also new openings for social control strategies.
*Aaron Doyle, Carleton University*
In this cogent and compact book with its innovative "mediated
order" approach to concept and method, Chris Schneider helps us
understand the game-changing, barely scratched field of social
media and social control. In a world awash, or even drowning, in
the rising tides of instantaneous, global social media, his case
studies lucidly illustrate that the facts do not speak for
themselves. Rather, they are representational resources conditioned
by their format in the enduring conflicts over meaning and who gets
to define reality. Democratic societies do best with the visibility
of open communication processes that can bring accountability. This
book is most welcome in helping us understand the processes by
which the facts and their print, visual and auditory stories are
chosen, culled, invented and spun under the dynamic influences of
new information technologies.
*Gary Marx, author of "Windows into the Soul: Surveillance and
Society in an Age of Technology"*
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