AdornoT.1990. The Culture Industry: Selected Essays on Mass Culture, New York: Routledge.
2.
AltheideD.1994. ‘An Ecology of Communication: Toward the Mapping of the Effective Environment,’The Sociological Quarterly, 35/4: 665–683.
3.
BachrachMBaratzP.1962. ‘Two Faces of Power,’American Political Review, 56: 947–52.
4.
BianchiniF.1990. ‘The Crisis of Urban Public Social Life in Britain: Origins of the Problem and Possible Responses,’Planning, Policy and Research, 5/3: 4–8.
5.
BlackD.1984a. ‘Social Control as a Dependent Variable,’ in BlackD. (ed.) Toward a General Theory of Social ControlVol. 1, New York: Academic Press.
6.
BlackD.1984b. ‘Crime as Social Control,’ in BlackD. (ed.) Toward a General Theory of Social ControlVol. 2, New York: Academic Press.
7.
BogardW.1996. The Simulation of Surveillance: Hypercontrol in Telematic Societies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
8.
CastelR.1991. ‘From Dangerousness to Risk,’ in BurchellG.GordonC.MillerP. (eds.) The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmentality, Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press, pp. 281–298.
9.
ChristieN.1977. ‘Conflict as Property,’British Journal of Criminology, 17/1: 1–15.
10.
CohenS.1985. Visions of Social Control: Crime, Punishment and Classification, Cambridge: Polity Press.
11.
CrushJ.1992. ‘Power and Surveillance in the South African Gold Mines,’Journal of Southern African Studies, 18/4: 825–844.
12.
DahlR.1961. Power and democracy in America, Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press.
13.
DeleuzeJ.1988. Foucault, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
14.
DeleuzeJ.GuattariF.1987. Mille Plateux: A Thousand Plateaus, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
15.
de LintW.2000. Autonomy, Regulation and the Police Beat, Social and Legal Studies, 9/2: 55–83.
16.
DigeserP.1992. ‘The Fourth Face of Power,’The Journal of Politics, 54/4: 977–1007.
17.
EricsonR.ShearingC.1986. ‘The Scientification of Police Work,’ in BohmeG.StehrN. (eds.) The Knowledge Society, D. Reidel, 1986.
18.
EllicksonR.1991. Order Without Law: How Neighbours Settle Disputes, Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
19.
ElmerG.1997. ‘Space of Surveillance: Indexicality and Solicitation on the Internet,’Critical Studies in Mass Communication14/2: 182–191.
20.
EsquithS.1987. ‘Professional Authority and State Power,’Theory and Society, 16/2: 237–262.
21.
FoucaultM.1979. Discipline and Punish, New York: Vintage.
22.
FoucaultM.1984. ‘Panopticism,’ in RabinowPaul (ed.) Foucault: A Reader, New York: Pantheon, pp. 206–213.
23.
FoucaultM.1988a. ‘The Dangerous Individual,’ in KritzmanLawrence (ed.) Michel Foucault: Politics, Philosophy, Culture, New York: Routledge, pp. 125–151.
24.
FoucaultM.1988b. ‘The Political Technology of Individuals,’ in MartinL.GutmanH.HuttonP. (eds.) Techologies of the Self: A Seminar with Michel Foucault, Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, pp. 145–162.
25.
FoxN.1995. ‘Postmodern Perspectives on Care: The Vigil and the Gift,’Critical Social Policy, 15/44: 107–125.
26.
FraserN.1989. ‘Foucault's Body Language: A Post-Humanist Political Rhetoric?’ in Unruly Practices, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, pp. 55–66.
27.
FyfeN.1996. ‘City Watching: Closed Circuit Television Surveillance in Public Spaces,’Area, 28/1: 37–46.
28.
GandyO.Jr.1989. ‘The Surveillance Society: Information Technology and Bureaucratic Social Control,’Journal of Communication, 39/3: 61–76.
29.
GiddensA.1990. The Consequences of Modernity, Stanford: Stanford University Press.
30.
GiddensA.1991. Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age, Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
31.
GiddensA.1985. The Nation State and Violence, Cambridge: Polity Press.
32.
GilliomJ.1997. ‘Everyday Surveillance, Everyday Resistance: Computer Monitoring in the Lives of the Appalachian Poor,’Studies in Law, Politics and Society, 6: 275–297.
33.
GoodwinG.HumphriesL.1982. ‘Freeze-Dried Stigma: Cybernetics and Social Control,’Humanity and Society, 6/4: 391–408.
34.
GreenA.1997. ‘How the Criminal Justice System Knows,’Social and Legal Studies, 6/1: 5–22.
35.
GusfieldJ.1989. ‘Constructing the Ownership of Social Problems: Fun and Profit in the Welfare State,’Social Problems, 36/5: 431–441.
36.
HalseyBWhiteR.1998. ‘Crime, Ecophilosophy and Environmental Harm,’Theoretical Criminology, 2/3: 345–371.
37.
HebertS.1996. ‘The Geopolitics of the Police: Foucault, Disciplinary Power, and the Tactics of the Los Angeles Police Department,’Political Geography, 15/1: 47–57.
38.
HenryS.1985. ‘Community Justice, Capitalist Society, and Human Agency: The Dialectics of Collective Law in the Cooperative,’Law and Society Review, 19/2: 303–327.
39.
HenryS.MilovanovicD.1991. ‘Constitutive Criminology: The Maturation of Critical Theory,’Criminology, 29/2: 293–315.
40.
HerbertS.1996. ‘The Geo-Politics of the Police: Foucault, Disciplinary Power and the Tactics of the Los Angeles Police Department,’Political Geography, 15/1: 47–59.
41.
HillierJ.1996. ‘The Gaze in the City: Video Surveillance in Perth,’Australian Geographical Studies, 34/1: 95–105.
MerryS.1988. ‘Legal Pluralism,’Law and Society Review, 22/5: 869–896.
54.
MichaelM.StillA.1992. ‘Power-Knowledge and Affordance,’Theory and Society, 21.6: 869–888.
55.
NockS.1993. The Costs of Privacy: Surveillance and Reputation in America, New YorkDe Gruyter.
56.
O'ConnorD.1997. ‘Lines of Flight: The Visual Apparatus in Foucault and Deleuze,’Space and Culture, 1: 49–66.
57.
PasquinoP.1991. ‘Criminology: the Birth of a Special Knowledge,’ in BurchellG.GordonC.MillerP. (eds.) The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmentality, Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press, pp. 235–250.
58.
PattonP.1999. ‘Difference and Multiplicity,’ Unpublished Manuscript.
59.
PosterM.1990. The Mode of Information, Oxford: Polity Press.
60.
PrattA.2000. A Political Anatomy of Detention and Deportation in Canada, Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, Centre of Criminology, University of Toronto.
RortyR.1979. Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, Princeton: Princeton University Press.
63.
RuleJ.BrantleyP.1992. ‘Computerized Surveillance in the Workplace: Forms and Distributions,’Sociological Forum, 7/3: 406–423.
64.
SchillerH.1981. ‘Information for What Kind of Society?’Current Research on Peace and Violence, 4/3: 218–228.
65.
SewellG.WilkinsonB.1992. ‘Someone to Watch Over Me: Surveillance, Discipline and the Just-in-time Labour Process,’Sociology, 26/2: 271–289.
66.
ShearingC.StenningP.1985. ‘From the Panopticon to Disneyworld: The Development of Discipline,’ in DoobA.GreenspanE. (eds.) Perspectives in Criminal Law, Aurora, Ont.: Canada Book Co., pp 335–49.
67.
SimonJ.1997. ‘Governing Through Crime,’ in FriedmanLawrence M.FisherGeorge (Eds). The Crime Conundrum: Essays on Criminal Justice, New York: Westview Press, pp. 171–189.
68.
SimonJ.1987. ‘The Ideological Effects of Actuarial Practices,’Law and Society Review, 22/4: 771–800.
69.
SmartC.1990. Feminism and the Power of Law, New York: Routledge.
70.
StinchcombeA.1963. ‘The Institution of Privacy in the Determination of Police Administrative Practice,’American Journal of Sociology, 9: 150–61.
71.
WardT.1997. ‘Law, Common Sense, and the Authority of Science: Expert Witnesses and Criminal Insanity in England,’Social and Legal Studies, 6/3: 343–362.
72.
WikseJ.1978. ‘Marx on Authenticity and the Liberal View of Man,’ in McGrathM. (ed.) Liberalism and Modern Polity, New York: Decker, pp. 21–33.