TITLE:
The Influence of Digital Technology on Decision-Making in the South African Police Service: Balancing Emerging Technologies with Ethical Imperatives
AUTHORS:
Jeanne Smit, Philip Vuma, Divya Singh
KEYWORDS:
South African Police Service (SAPS), Digital Policing, Crime Intelligence, Technology and Ethical Decision-Making, Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR), Ethics and Accountability in Policing
JOURNAL NAME:
Advances in Applied Sociology,
Vol.16 No.4,
April
8,
2026
ABSTRACT: Digital technology is increasingly reshaping decision-making in policing, altering how law enforcement agencies gather information, allocate resources, and respond to threats. This paper critically examines the influence of digital technology on decision-making within the South African Police Service (SAPS), with particular emphasis on the transition into Fourth and Fifth Industrial Revolution (4IR/5IR) environments. SAPS operates under a constitutionally defined mandate to prevent, combat, and investigate crime; maintain public order; protect inhabitants and property; and uphold the law. As crime becomes more complex—including cybercrime and technology-enabled criminality—SAPS is compelled to modernise its systems and practices to maintain operational relevance and legitimacy. The study explores SAPS’s current digital initiatives, including crime intelligence systems, e-dockets, automated fingerprint identification systems, CCTV surveillance, mobile applications (including the newly launched MySAPS App), digital forensics, drones, and limited body-worn camera pilots. While these initiatives offer significant promise for improving efficiency, transparency, accountability, and community engagement, they also introduce new ethical and governance risks. These include algorithmic bias, unequal access to technological resources across operational levels, data privacy vulnerabilities, and the potential erosion of human rights through surveillance and media exposure. The paper argues that emerging technologies can enhance policing outcomes only when supported by robust legal frameworks, clear practice guidelines, and decision-makers who understand both the capabilities and limitations of the tools they deploy. Using Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovation Theory as a guiding framework, the study analyses how SAPS leaders interpret, adopt, implement, and evaluate digital technologies. A qualitative methodology is employed, drawing on interviews with 25 senior SAPS officials, document analysis, and observational insights. Findings highlight both strong institutional intent toward digital transformation and persistent barriers, including resource constraints, outdated infrastructure, uneven skills development, and resistance to change. The paper concludes that SAPS’s digital future depends on balancing innovation with ethical imperatives, strengthening training and governance, and ensuring technology adoption advances democratic policing principles.