Spycops: Secrets and Disclosure in the Undercover Policing Inquiry

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Policy Press, Apr 23, 2024 - Social Science - 222 pages
The ‘spycops’ scandal has laid bare the existence of secretive police units that sent undercover police officers to infiltrate and undermine hundreds of political campaigns and activist groups. This is the first academic analysis of the activists’ experiences and their attempts to find answers and accountability in the Undercover Policing Inquiry. Written from the perspective of the ‘policed’, the author draws on extensive fieldwork and his first-hand experience of police infiltration through his participation in climate campaigns.
 

Contents

1 An unacknowledged truth
1
2 The undercover policing scandal
22
3 Deviant knowledge and activist research
46
4 The public inquiry as a site of struggle
67
5 Dirty data and devices of disclosure
95
6 Human rights and data protection
122
7 In and against the Undercover Policing Inquiry
147
8 Public inquiries at a crossroads
164
Terms of Reference
171
Timeline
173
Notes
180
References
183
Index
204
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About the author (2024)

Raphael Schlembach is Principal Lecturer in Criminology at the University of Brighton.

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