Studies from Dr. Alana Saulnier:
Saulnier, A., Lahay, R., McCarty, W. P., & Sanders, C. (2020). The RIDE study: Effects of body‐worn cameras on public perceptions of police interactions. Criminology & Public Policy, 19(3), 833-854.
Saulnier, A., Sanders, C., Lahay, R., Krupp, D.B., Lindsay, S.M., Couture-Carron, A., Scholte, D., Dorion, C. & Burke, K. (2020). Evaluation of the DRPS BWC pilot project: A report prepared for the Durham Regional Police Service. Whitby, ON, Canada.
St. Louis, E., Saulnier, A., & Walby, K. (2019). Police Use of Body-Worn Cameras: Challenges of Visibility, Procedural Justice, and Legitimacy. Surveillance & Society 17(3/4): 305-321.
Studies from Dr. Cynthia Lum:
Lum, C., Koper, C., Wilson, B., Stoltz, M., Goodier, M., Eggins, E., Higginson, A., & Mazerolle, L. (2020). The impacts of body-worn cameras in policing. Campbell Collaboration Systematic Review
Studies mentioned by Dr. Michael White:
Braga, A., Coldren Jr., J., Sousa, W., Rodriguez, D., & Alper, O. (2017) Benefits of Body-Worn Cameras: New Findings from a Randomized Controlled Trial at the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department.
Zimroth, P. (2020) The Deployment of Body Worn Cameras on New York City Police Department (NYPD) Officers.
Studies from Dr. Bryce Newell:
Pre-orders for Dr. Bryce Newell's new book:
Newell, B. (2021). Police Visibility: Privacy, Surveillance, and the False Promise of Body-Worn Cameras .
Bryce Clayton Newell (editor) (2021), Police on Camera: Surveillance, Privacy, and Accountability. Routledge
Marthinus C. Koen, Bryce Clayton Newell, and Melinda R. Roberts, “Body-Worn Cameras: Technological Frames and Project Abandonment.” Journal of Criminal Justice 72 (1)
Bryce Clayton Newell and Ruben Greidanus, “Officer Discretion and the Choice to Record: Officer Attitudes Towards Body-Worn Camera Activation.” North Carolina Law Review 96 (5): 1525–1578 (2018)
Bryce Clayton Newell, “Collateral Visibility: A Socio-Legal Study of Police Body Camera Adoption, Privacy, and Public Disclosure in Washington State.” Indiana Law Journal 92 (4): 1329–1399 (2017)
Bryce Clayton Newell, “Context, Visibility, and Control: Police Work and the Contested Objectivity of Bystander Video.” New Media & Society 21 (1): 60–76 (2019)