Artigo Revisado por pares

Algorithmic tyranny: Psycho-Pass , science fiction and the criminological imagination

2018; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 15; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1177/1741659018774609

ISSN

1741-6604

Autores

Mark A. Wood,

Tópico(s)

Digital Games and Media

Resumo

This article makes a case for the value of science fiction to criminologists through examining the popular Japanese cyber-punk anime series Psycho-Pass. Through portraying a surveillance society of pre-crime and algorithmic policing, Psycho-Pass raises important questions about the datafication of crime and its role in facilitating increasingly invasive and ubiquitous forms of social control. Psycho-Pass, I argue, encourages us to question a society of algorithmic tyranny: a society where the overwhelming majority of classifications are driven by algorithms, and where crime has been reduced to a data object and ‘measureable type’. I conclude my case for incorporating the technological imagination of science fiction into the criminological imagination through identifying three key resources the genre may offer criminologists: archaeological, pedagogical and capacity building for reflexive governance.

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