Abstract
Technologies not only extend capabilities but also mediate experience and action. To date, however, research on technology-facilitated violence has not focused on the role technological mediation plays in acts of violence facilitated through technology. In response to this lacuna, this article develops a theoretical framework and typology for understanding the role technological mediation plays in producing technology-facilitated violence. First, drawing on postphenomenological theories of technology, we argue that technology-facilitated violence is best understood as a form of ‘harm translation,’ where a technology’s affordances and other properties ‘invite’ an individual to actualize harmful ends. Then, distinguishing between four modes of harm translation, we construct a typology for analysing the intersections between user intention and technological design that, together, facilitate violence. We argue that by attending to these distinctions our typology helps researchers and designers identify and address the specific causal dynamics involved in producing different kinds of technology-facilitated harm.
History
Journal
The British Journal of Criminology: an international review of crime and society