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基本説明
Shows how expensive security equipment is sold in the same slick business-like way as any other commodity, and highlights the trend of turning schools into corporatized and militarized zones.
Full Description
In the wake of school shootings and the more recent threats of terrorism, schools - like many public institutions - have begun installing techno-security equipment ranging from surveillance cameras to microchip tracking systems. Is this equipment necessary and who really benefits from its use? Selling Us the Fortress, the first qualitative study of the relationship between the security industry and schools, analyzes how technologies once reserved primarily for war have become a common fixture in modern schools, including detailing how school personnel are "sold" on the idea that the mass installation of techno-security is in their best interest.
Contents
Introduction: Getting Down to Business of Being Safe 1. The Security Industry and the Public School Market 2. Selling Social Betterment for Ones Own Private Utopia 3. The Safest Society Technology Can Create and Money Can Buy 4. The Promises of Techno-Security Fortification 5. Horror Stories that Sell 6. Security, the Law, and Federal Policy 7. Transactions on the Open Market Conclusion. The Big Business of Big Brother. Appendix: Overview of Research Notes. References. Glossary and List of Organizations. Index



