RT Article T1 Big Data applied to criminal investigations: expectations of professionals of police cooperation in the European Union JF Policing and society VO 32 IS 10 SP 1167 OP 1179 A1 Neiva, Laura A2 Granja, Rafaela A2 Machado, Helena LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1830017659 AB Big Data is seen as an increasingly important tool to support policing activities, define security governance policies and assist criminal investigations. Although significant literature has explored the predictive capabilities of Big Data, there has been less focus on the uses of Big Data in criminal investigations, focused on detection and apprehension that occur after a crime has been committed. This article aims to fill this gap through the lens of expectations of professionals involved in police cooperation in the European Union. Based upon a set of qualitative interviews, our analysis explores these professionals’ expectations for the application of Big Data techniques in criminal investigations by using DNA data held in national criminal DNA databases and, therefore, potentially increasing the interoperability between genetic and non-genetic data. Our results reveal a flexible repertoire of interpretation of the expectations for the uses of Big Data in criminal investigations and its associated potential risks and benefits. The perceived benefits relate to expectations for Big Data’s potential to advance cold cases and strengthen the interoperability of multiple datasets in ways that produce intelligence valuable for criminal investigations. Perceived risks concern the difficulties associated with investigating large sets of data, the potential for enforcing genetic discrimination, and threatening privacy and human rights. K1 European Union K1 Expectations K1 Criminal Investigation K1 Big Data DO 10.1080/10439463.2022.2029433