Watching the watchers: Conducting ethnographic research on covert police investigation in the United Kingdom
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In: Qualitative Research, Vol. 16, No. 6, 12.2016, p. 630-645.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Watching the watchers
T2 - Conducting ethnographic research on covert police investigation in the United Kingdom
AU - Mac Giollabhui, Shane
AU - Goold, Benjamin
AU - Loftus, Bethan
PY - 2016/12
Y1 - 2016/12
N2 - It has long been claimed that the police are the most visible symbol of the criminal justice system (Bittner, 1974). There is, however, a significant strand of policing – covert investigation that relies routinely on methods of deception – that resists public revelation (Ross, 2008). The growing importance of covert police investigation has profound implications for the relationship between citizen and the state in a democratic society, but it is relatively unexplored by police researchers. In this article, we describe the methodology of the first ethnographic study of how the introduction of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (2000) – a piece of ‘enabling’ legislation that regulates the conditions under which law enforcement agencies can intervene in the privacy of individuals – has effected the conduct of covert police investigation in the United Kingdom. We describe our ethnographic experience in the ‘secret world’ of covert policing, which is familiar in many respects to ethnographers of uniformed officers, but which also differed significantly. We contend that the organizing principle of surveillance – the imperative to maintain the secrecy of an operation – had a marked impact on our ethnographic experience, which eroded significantly our status as non-participant observers and altered out reflexive experience by activating the ‘usefulness’ of our gender.
AB - It has long been claimed that the police are the most visible symbol of the criminal justice system (Bittner, 1974). There is, however, a significant strand of policing – covert investigation that relies routinely on methods of deception – that resists public revelation (Ross, 2008). The growing importance of covert police investigation has profound implications for the relationship between citizen and the state in a democratic society, but it is relatively unexplored by police researchers. In this article, we describe the methodology of the first ethnographic study of how the introduction of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (2000) – a piece of ‘enabling’ legislation that regulates the conditions under which law enforcement agencies can intervene in the privacy of individuals – has effected the conduct of covert police investigation in the United Kingdom. We describe our ethnographic experience in the ‘secret world’ of covert policing, which is familiar in many respects to ethnographers of uniformed officers, but which also differed significantly. We contend that the organizing principle of surveillance – the imperative to maintain the secrecy of an operation – had a marked impact on our ethnographic experience, which eroded significantly our status as non-participant observers and altered out reflexive experience by activating the ‘usefulness’ of our gender.
KW - Covert Police Investigation
KW - Ethnography
KW - Policing
KW - RIPA
KW - Surveillance
U2 - 10.1177/1468794115622529
DO - 10.1177/1468794115622529
M3 - Article
VL - 16
SP - 630
EP - 645
JO - Qualitative Research
JF - Qualitative Research
SN - 1468-7941
IS - 6
ER -