Criminology & Criminal Justice
0(0) 1–17
© The Author(s) 2011
Reprints and permission: sagepub.
co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav
DOI: 10.1177/1748895811432957
crj.sagepub.com
E-safety education: Young
people, surveillance and
responsibility
David Barnard-Wills
Cranfield University, UK
Abstract
This article presents the findings of an analysis of ‘e-safety’ education material currently made
available to UK schools, and currently being delivered to children and young people between
the ages of five and 18. E-safety refers to the way that young people are taught about risks
online, how they can protect themselves, and to whom they should report worrying activity.
The article is grounded in political understanding of education as a political strategy, and one
that is conducted by multiple actors, including policing agencies. The article therefore relates
e-safety education to a broader politics of surveillance, crime prevention and governmental
rationalities and techniques. Formal education does not determine, but likely influences the
perceptions of young people towards the digitally mediated environment – including roles of
authority, appropriate behavioural norms and risk perception (currently dominated by the threat
of child sexual abuse). The most commonly used and disseminated e-safety education material is
that produced by the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre. This article examines the
role of a policing agency in delivering education, one that also functions as an agent of digitally
mediated surveillance in its law enforcement functions. Education is an explicit strategy of political
actors involved in the politics of digitally mediated surveillance.
Keywords
education, internet, policing, privacy, surveillance
Introduction
This article presents findings of an analysis of ‘e-safety’ education material currently
available to UK schools, and delivered to children and young people between the ages of
Corresponding author:
David Barnard-Wills, Department of Informatics and Systems Engineering, Cranfield University,
Shrivenham, Swindon, SN6 8LA, UK
Email: d.barnardwills@cranfield.ac.uk
Article