Can computer profiles cut crime?
David Edmonds examines how algorithms are used in our criminal justice system, from predicting future crime to helping decide who does and doesnβt go to prison.
While police forces hope computer software will help them to assess risk and reduce crime, civil rights groups fear that it could entrench bias and discrimination.
Analysis asks if these new computer tools will transform policing - and whether we need new laws to regulate them.
Contributors
Archive from Cable-Satellite Public Affairs Network
Jonathan Dowey, business intelligence manager, Avon and Somerset Police
Hannah Couchman, Advocacy and Policy Officer, Liberty
Professor Lawrence Sherman, Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge
Bryanna Fox, Associate Professor of Criminology University of South Florida
Dame Glenys Stacey, The Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation
Jamie Grace, Senior Lecturer in Law, Sheffield Hallam University
Producer: Diane Richardson
Editor: Jasper Corbett