Publication Cover
Policing and Society
An International Journal of Research and Policy
Volume 30, 2020 - Issue 10
1,588
Views
13
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Social media and border security: Twitter use by migration policing agencies

ORCID Icon
Pages 1138-1156 | Received 24 May 2019, Accepted 05 Sep 2019, Published online: 16 Sep 2019

References

  • Aas, K.F., 2013. Globalization and crime. London: Sage.
  • Altheide, D.L. and Schneider, C.J., 2013. Qualitative media analysis. London: Sage.
  • Amoore, L., 2006. Biometric borders: governing mobilities in the war on terror. Political geography, 25 (3), 336–351.
  • Andreas, P., 2012. Border games. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
  • Barak, G., 1994. Between the waves: mass-mediated themes of crime and justice. Social justice, 21 (57), 133–147.
  • Bauder, H., 2008. Media discourse and the new German immigration law. Journal of ethnic and migration studies, 34 (1), 95–112.
  • Bauman, Z., 1999. In search of politics. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Beckett, K., 1994. Setting the public agenda: ‘street crime’ and drug use in American politics. Social problems, 41 (3), 425–447.
  • Bennett, W.L. and Segerberg, A., 2013. The logic of connective action. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Benson, R., 2013. Shaping immigration news. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
  • Bier, D., 2018. 60% of deported ‘Criminal Aliens’ committed only victimless crimes [online]. CATO Institute. Available from: https://www.cato.org/blog/60-deported-criminal-aliens-committed-only-victimless-crimes-few-violent-crimes [Accessed 15 November 2018].
  • Bloemraad, I., 2012. Understanding ‘Canadian exceptionalism’ in immigration and pluralism policy. Migration Policy Institute, July.
  • Bosniak, L., 2008. The citizen and the alien. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Bowling, B. and Sheptycki, J., 2012. Global policing. London: Sage.
  • boyd, D., 2010. Social network sites as networked publics. In: Z. Papacharissi, ed. A networked self. London: Routledge, 47–66.
  • Brodeur, J.P., 2010. The policing web. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Brown, W., 2010. Walled states, waning sovereignty. Cambridge: Zone Books.
  • Bullock, K., 2018. (Re)presenting ‘order’ online: the construction of police presentational strategies on social media. Policing and society, 28 (3), 345–359.
  • Carrabine, E., 2008. Crime, culture and the media. Oxford: Polity Press.
  • Castles, S. and Miller, M., 2009. The age of migration: international population movements in the modern world. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
  • Chavez, L., 2001. Covering immigration: popular images and the politics of the nation. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Chermak, S. and Weiss, A., 2005. Maintaining legitimacy using external communication strategies: an analysis of police-media relations. Journal of criminal justice, 33 (5), 501–512.
  • Chibnall, S., 2013. Law-and-order news. London: Routledge.
  • Cohen, S., 2002. Folk devils and moral panics. London: Routledge.
  • Comaroff, J. and Comaroff, J.L., 2006. Law and disorder in the postcolony. In: J. Comaroff and J.L. Comaroff, eds. Law and disorder in the postcolony. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1–56.
  • Crawford, A., 1999. The local governance of crime. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Crump, J., 2011. What are the police doing on Twitter? Social media, the police and the public. Policy & internet, 3 (4), 1–27.
  • Dauvergne, C., 2008. Making people illegal. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Davis, E.F., Alves, A.A., and Sklansky, D.A., 2014. Social media and police leadership: lessons from Boston. Australasian policing, 6 (1), 1–7.
  • De Genova, N., 2013. Spectacles of migrant ‘illegality’: the scene of exclusion, the obscene of inclusion. Ethnic and racial studies, 36 (7), 1180–1198.
  • Denef, S., Bayerl, P.S., and Kaptein, N.A., 2013. Social media and the police: tweeting practices of British police forces during the August 2011 riots. Proceedings of the Computer-Human Interaction Conference, 27 April–2 May 2013, Paris, France. New York, NY: ACM, 3471–3480.
  • Doyle, A., 2003. Arresting images. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Earl, J., et al., 2013. This protest will be tweeted: Twitter and protest policing during the Pittsburgh G20. Information, communication & society, 16 (4), 459–478.
  • Ericson, R.V., 1982. Reproducing order: a study of police patrol work. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Ericson, R.V. and Haggerty, K.D., 1997. Policing the risk society. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Fishman, M., 1978. Crime waves as ideology. Social problems, 25 (5), 531–543.
  • Fiske, J., 2011. Reading the popular. London: Routledge.
  • Garland, D., 1996. The limits of the sovereign state. British journal of criminology, 36 (4), 445–471.
  • Garland, D., 2001. Culture of control. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Gilpin, D., 2010. Organizational image construction in a fragmented online media environment. Journal of public relations research, 22 (3), 265–287.
  • Goldsmith, A., 2010. Policing’s new visibility. British journal of criminology, 50 (5), 914–934.
  • Hall, S., et al., 2013. Policing the crisis. New York, NY: Macmillan International Higher Education.
  • Harcourt, B.E., 2015. Exposed: desire and disobedience in the digital age. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Hatty, S., 1991. Police, crime and the media. International journal of the sociology of law, 19 (2), 171–191.
  • Heverin, T. and Zach, L., 2010a. Twitter for city police department information sharing. Proceedings of the American society for information science and technology, 47 (1), 1–7.
  • Heverin, T. and Zach, L., 2010b. Microblogging for crisis communication: examination of Twitter use in response to a 2009 violent crisis in the Seattle-Tacoma, Washington, area. Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management, Seattle, WA, 1–5.
  • Huey, L. and Broll, R., 2012. ‘All it takes is one TV show to ruin it’: a police perspective on police-media relations in the era of expanding prime time crime markets. Policing and society, 22 (4), 384–396.
  • Inda, J.X. and Dowling, J.A., 2013. Introduction: governing migrant illegality. In: J. Inda and J. Dowling, eds. Governing immigration through crime: a reader. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 1–22.
  • International Association of Chiefs of Police, 2016. 2015 social media survey results [online]. Available from: http://www.iacpsocialmedia.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/FULL-2015-Social-Media-Survey-Results.compressed.pdf [Accessed 1 May 2019].
  • Jewkes, Y., 2015. Media and crime. London: Sage.
  • Johnston, L., 1992. The rebirth of private policing. London: Routledge.
  • Kelling, G.L. and Moore, M.H., 2005. The evolving strategy of policing. In: T. Newburn, ed. Policing: key readings. London: Willan, 88–108.
  • Krippendorff, K., 2012. Content analysis: an introduction to its methodology. London: Sage.
  • Kudla, D. and Parnaby, P., 2018. To serve and to tweet: an examination of police related Twitter activity in Toronto. Social media + society, 4 (3). doi:10.1177/2056305118787520.
  • Lee, M. and McGovern, A., 2013. Policing and media: public relations, simulations and communications. London: Routledge.
  • Lieberman, J.D., Koetzle, D., and Sakiyama, M., 2013. Police departments’ use of Facebook: patterns and policy issues. Police quarterly, 16 (4), 438–462.
  • Linders, D., 2012. From e-government to we-government: defining a typology for citizen coproduction in the age of social media. Government information quarterly, 29 (4), 446–454.
  • Loader, I., 2000. Plural policing and democratic governance. Social & legal studies, 9 (3), 323–345.
  • Loader, B. and Mercea, D., 2011. Networking democracy? Information, communication and society, 14 (6), 757–769.
  • Lyon, D., 2005. The border is everywhere: ID cards, surveillance and the other. In: M. Salter and E. Zuriek, eds. Global surveillance and policing. London: Routledge, 66–82.
  • Manning, P.K., 1978. The police: mandate, strategy and appearances. In: P. Manning and J. Van Maanen, eds. Policing: a view from the street. New York, NY: Random House, 7–31.
  • Manning, P.K., 1997. Police work: the social organization of policing. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press.
  • Mawby, R., 2013. Policing images. Devon: Willan.
  • Meijer, A. and Thaens, M., 2013. Social media strategies: understanding the differences between North American police departments. Government information quarterly, 30 (4), 343–350.
  • Melossi, D., 2003. In a peaceful life: migration and the crime of modernity in Europe/Italy. Punishment & society, 5 (4), 371–397.
  • Meyers, E., 2004. International immigration policy: a theoretical and comparative analysis. New York, NY: Springer.
  • Mitchell, T., 1991. The limits of the state: beyond statist approaches and their critics. The American political science review, 85 (1), 77–96.
  • Mitsilegas, V., 2012. Immigration control in an era of globalization: deflecting foreigners, weakening citizens, strengthening the state. Indiana journal of global legal studies, 19 (1), 3–60.
  • Morley, D., 2003. Television, audiences and cultural studies. London: Routledge.
  • Murthy, D., 2013. Twitter. London: Polity Press.
  • O’Connor, C.D., 2017. The police on Twitter: image management, community building, and implications for policing in Canada. Policing and society, 27 (8), 899–912.
  • O’Malley, P., 1996. Risk and responsibility. In: A. Barry, T. Osborne, and N. Rose, eds. Foucault and political reason. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 189–207.
  • Pottie-Sherman, Y. and Wilkes, R., 2016. Visual media and the construction of the benign Canadian border on national geographic’s border security. Social & cultural geography, 17 (1), 81–100.
  • Pratt, A., 2005. Securing borders: detention and deportation in Canada. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
  • Reiner, R., 2008. Policing and the media. In: T. Newburn, ed. Handbook of policing. Cullompton: Willan Publishing, 313–335.
  • Reiner, R., 2013. Law and order. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Schneider, C., 2016. Policing and social media: social control in an era of new media. London: Lexington Books.
  • Shaban, H., 2019. Twitter reveals its daily active user numbers for the first time. Washington Post, 7 February.
  • Shamir, R., 2005. Without borders? Sociological theory, 23 (2), 197–217.
  • Shearing, C. and Wood, J., 2003. Nodal governance, democracy, and the new ‘denizens’. Journal of law and society, 30 (3), 400–419.
  • Skogan, W.G., 2006. The promise of community policing. In: D. Weisburd and A. Braga, eds. Police innovation: contrasting perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 27–43.
  • Stumpf, J., 2006. The crimmigration crisis: immigrants, crime, and sovereign power. American university law review, 56 (2), 367–419.
  • Surrette, R., 2014. Media, crime, and criminal justice. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
  • Tosh, S., 2019. Drugs, crime, and aggravated felony deportations: moral panic theory and the legal construction of the ‘criminal alien’. Critical criminology, 27 (2), 329–345.
  • Trottier, D., 2012. Policing social media. Canadian review of sociology, 49 (4), 411–425.
  • Turner, B.S., 2007. The enclave society: towards a sociology of immobility. European journal of social theory, 10 (2), 287–304.
  • Tyler, T., 2003. Procedural justice, legitimacy, and the effective rule of law. Crime and justice, 30, 283–357.
  • Vaidhyanathan, S., 2018. Antisocial media: how Facebook disconnects us and undermines democracy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Walsh, J.P., 2014. Watchful citizens: immigration control, surveillance and societal participation. Social & legal studies, 23 (2), 237–259.
  • Walsh, J.P., 2015. Border theatre and security spectacles: surveillance, mobility and reality-based television. Crime, media, culture, 11 (2), 201–221.
  • Walsh, J., 2018. Report and deport: public vigilance and migration policing in Australia. Theoretical criminology. doi:10.1177/1362480618756363.
  • Walsh, J.P., 2019. Education or enforcement? Enrolling universities in the surveillance and policing of migration. Crime, law and social change, 71 (4), 325–344.
  • Walsh, J.P. and Lee, J.R., 2017. Mass-mediated surveillance: borders, mobility, and reality television. Information, communication & society, 20 (2), 299–318.
  • Walsh, J.P. and O’Connor, C., 2019. Social media and policing: a review of recent research. Sociology compass, 13 (1), 1–14.
  • Weber, L., 2013. Policing non-citizens. London: Routledge.
  • Welch, M., Fenwick, M., and Roberts, M., 1998. State managers, intellectuals, and the media. Justice quarterly, 15 (2), 219–241.
  • Yar, M., 2014. The cultural imaginary of the internet. New York, NY: Springer.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.