Project Lead: Norway
Heidi Mork Lomell is Professor at the University of Oslo and Professor II at the Norwegian Police University College. Lomell’s research interests include policing, surveillance, human rights and crime statistics. She has for nearly two decades worked with various surveillance studies projects, among them “Living in Surveillance Societies” (COST network, vice chair), “UrbanEye: On the Threshold to Urban Panopticon” (EU funded project, project member) and “Surveillance Studies Network” (board member). Lomell is Norwegian team leader of the project.
Recent publications include (English selection):
Lomell, Heidi Mork (2018). “Investigation or instigation? Enforcing grooming legislation.” In: Nicholas R. Fyfe; Helene Ingebrigtsen Gundhus & Kira Vrist Rønn (ed.), Moral Issues in Intelligence-led Policing. Routledge.
Lomell, Heidi Mork (2012). “Punishing the uncommitted crime: prevention, pre-emption, precaution and the transformation of criminal law.” In: Barbara Hudson and Synnøve Ugelvik (ed.), Justice and Security in the 21st Century: Risks, Rights and the Rule of Law. Routledge.
The Mutual Construction of Statistics and Society. Ed. Ann Rudinow Sætnan, Heidi Mork Lomell and Svein Hammer. New York: Routledge (2010)
Lomell, Heidi Mork (2010). ”The Politics of Numbers: Crime Statistics as a Source of Knowledge and a Tool of Governance”. In: International Handbook of criminology. Ed.by Shlomo G. Shoham, Paul Knepper og Martin Kett. New York: Taylor & Francis group
Technologies of InSecurity. The Surveillance of Everyday Life. Ed. Katja Franko Aas, Helene Oppen Gundhus and Heidi Mork Lomell. London: Routledge/Cavendish (2009)
Website: http://www.jus.uio.no/ikrs/english/people/aca/heidilo/index.html