The Experts below are selected from a list of 4653 Experts worldwide ranked by ideXlab platform
Craig Hemmens - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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Upskirting: A Statutory Analysis of Legislative Responses to Video Voyeurism 10 Years Down the Road
Criminal Justice Review, 2017Co-Authors: Wesley S. Mccann, Amelie Pedneault, Mary K. Stohr, Craig HemmensAbstract:“Upskirting” or video Voyeurism involves the use of video cameras in public spaces to record underneath women’s clothing. This activity became commonplace with the advent of cell phones cameras and...
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Up Skirts and Down Blouses: A Statutory Analysis of Legislative Responses to Video Voyeurism
Criminal Justice Studies, 2006Co-Authors: Valerie Bell, Craig Hemmens, Benjamin SteinerAbstract:Video Voyeurism is a relatively new crime that involves the use of video cameras in public areas to record underneath women’s clothing. Recently, several courts have determined that this form of Voyeurism is not covered under existing criminal statutes dealing with Voyeurism. This paper examines current statutes relating to Voyeurism to determine if these laws are adequate or if new legislation is required to combat video Voyeurism. Some of the areas covered include: the nature of video Voyeurism, challenges faced by law enforcement, and the challenges faced by lawmakers attempting to write legislation which will clearly criminalize the behavior.
Lemi Baruh - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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mediated Voyeurism and the guilty pleasure of consuming reality television
Media Psychology, 2010Co-Authors: Lemi BaruhAbstract:Media commentators have frequently argued that the rising popularity of reality programs stems from the show's ability to accommodate television viewers' voyeuristic needs. However, extant literature provides inconsistent evidence regarding the relationship between Voyeurism and consumption of reality programs. This article expands on work by Baruh (2009) showing that Voyeurism and social comparison tendency were positively associated with consumption of reality programming. After controlling for viewer demographics and hours of television viewing, multivariate analyses in this article indicate that there exists a positive relationship between Voyeurism and consumption of reality programming, whereas social comparison tendency is no longer significantly related to reality programming consumption. Furthermore, bootstrap analysis indicates that the relationship between Voyeurism and consumption of reality programs is mediated by a tendency to engage in voyeuristic uses of television. In contrast to consumpt...
William A. Herbert - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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Workplace Consequences of Electronic Exhibitionism and Voyeurism
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine, 2011Co-Authors: William A. HerbertAbstract:Electronic exhibitionism de scribes the increasing worldwide phenomenon of individuals eviscerating their own privacy by affirmatively or inadvertently posting and distributing private and intimate information, thoughts, activities and photographs via email, text messaging, blogs, and social networking pages. Electronic Voyeurism is descriptive of the related phenomenon of individuals and employers, who are members of what Daniel J. So love has described as Generation Google, searching, indexing, and distributing electronic data about others.
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workplace consequences of electronic exhibitionism and Voyeurism
International Symposium on Technology and Society, 2010Co-Authors: William A. HerbertAbstract:The popularity of email, blogging and social networking raises important issues for employers, employees and labor unions. This article will explore contemporary workplace issues resulting from the related social phenomena of electronic exhibitionism and Voyeurism. It will begin with a discussion of the international social phenomenon of individuals electronically distributing their personal thoughts, opinions, and activities to a potential worldwide audience while at the same time retaining a subjective sense of privacy. The temptation toward such exhibitionism has been substantially enhanced by the advent of Web 2.0. The article then turns to the legal implications of electronic Voyeurism including employer surveillance of employee workplace computer use and employee off-duty blogs and social networking pages. It will also examine the issues associated with employers and recruiters conducting internet searches for information about job applicants. In the conclusion, the article will discuss various means for responding to the workplace issues resulting from electronic exhibitionism and Voyeurism on and off the job.1
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ISTAS - Workplace consequences of electronic exhibitionism and Voyeurism
2010 IEEE International Symposium on Technology and Society, 2010Co-Authors: William A. HerbertAbstract:The popularity of email, blogging and social networking raises important issues for employers, employees and labor unions. This article will explore contemporary workplace issues resulting from the related social phenomena of electronic exhibitionism and Voyeurism. It will begin with a discussion of the international social phenomenon of individuals electronically distributing their personal thoughts, opinions, and activities to a potential worldwide audience while at the same time retaining a subjective sense of privacy. The temptation toward such exhibitionism has been substantially enhanced by the advent of Web 2.0. The article then turns to the legal implications of electronic Voyeurism including employer surveillance of employee workplace computer use and employee off-duty blogs and social networking pages. It will also examine the issues associated with employers and recruiters conducting internet searches for information about job applicants. In the conclusion, the article will discuss various means for responding to the workplace issues resulting from electronic exhibitionism and Voyeurism on and off the job.1
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Workplace Consequences of Electronic Exhibitionism and Voyeurism
Social Science Research Network, 2009Co-Authors: William A. HerbertAbstract:The popularity of email, blogging and social networking raises important issues for employers, employees and labor unions. This article explores contemporary workplace issues resulting from the related social phenomena of electronic exhibitionism and Voyeurism. It begins with a discussion of the international social phenomenon of individuals electronically distributing their personal thoughts, opinions, and activities to a potential worldwide audience while at the same time retaining a subjective sense of privacy. The temptation toward such exhibitionism has been substantially enhanced by the advent of Web 2.0. The article then turns to the legal implications of electronic Voyeurism including employer surveillance of employee workplace computer use and employee off-duty blogs and social networking pages. It also examines the issues associated with employers and recruiters conducting internet searches for information about job applicants. In the conclusion, the article discusses various means for responding to the workplace issues resulting from electronic exhibitionism and Voyeurism on and off the job.
Wesley S. Mccann - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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Upskirting: A Statutory Analysis of Legislative Responses to Video Voyeurism 10 Years Down the Road
Criminal Justice Review, 2017Co-Authors: Wesley S. Mccann, Amelie Pedneault, Mary K. Stohr, Craig HemmensAbstract:“Upskirting” or video Voyeurism involves the use of video cameras in public spaces to record underneath women’s clothing. This activity became commonplace with the advent of cell phones cameras and...
David Bell - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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Surveillance is Sexy
surveillance and society, 2009Co-Authors: David BellAbstract:This paper considers sexualization of surveillance as a mode of resistance. It explores various modes of sexualized surveillance, from ‘reality porn’ to webcam footage, and focuses on the ways in which Voyeurism and exhibitionism are mobilized within an emerging ‘surveillance aesthetic’ across these forms. Building on work that considers ‘playful’ engagements with surveillance, and discussions of forms of counter-surveillance, the paper attempts to locate ‘sexy surveillance’ within this body of critical engagement that seeks not to hide from surveillance, but to confront its logics head on. In exploring how the omnipresence of surveillance shifts experiences of Voyeurism and exhibitionism into new contexts, the paper argues that sexualization is one possible response for the ‘surveillance-savvy’ subject to utilize.