This article adapts Marshall McLuhan’s writings on mass media to ubiquitous and universal surveillance systems, looking at surveillance as media. The term ‘broadcast media’ is derived from an agricultural metaphor, a technique of planting. I argue that CCTV systems are an inversion of broadcasting: ‘harvest media’. Drawing on three case studies in which CCTV has been relevant to allegations of police misconduct, I explore how harvest media impacts on cultural and legal perceptions of evidence, and what can be known.
CITATION STYLE
Evans, R. (2015). The footage is decisive’: Applying the thinking of marshall mcluhan to cctv and police misconduct. Surveillance and Society, 13(2), 218–232. https://doi.org/10.24908/ss.v13i2.5298
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