Cyber Criminology: Exploring Internet Crimes and Criminal Behavior

Portada
K. Jaishankar
Taylor & Francis, 22 feb 2011 - 461 páginas

Victimization through the Internet is becoming more prevalent as cyber criminals have developed more effective ways to remain anonymous. And as more personal information than ever is stored on networked computers, even the occasional or non-user is at risk. A collection of contributions from worldwide experts and emerging researchers, Cyber Criminology: Exploring Internet Crimes and Criminal Behavior explores today’s interface of computer science, Internet science, and criminology.

Topics discussed include:



  • The growing menace of cyber crime in Nigeria


  • Internet gambling and digital piracy


  • Sexual addiction on the Internet, child pornography, and online exploitation of children


  • Terrorist use of the Internet


  • Cyber stalking and cyber bullying


  • The victimization of women on social networking websites


  • Malware victimization and hacking


  • The Islamic world in cyberspace and the propagation of Islamic ideology via the Internet


  • Human rights concerns that the digital age has created


Approaching the topic from a social science perspective, the book explores methods for determining the causes of computer crime victimization by examining an individual’s lifestyle patterns. It also publishes the findings of a study conducted on college students about online victimization.

Advances in information and communications technologies have created a range of new crime problems that did not exist two decades ago. Opportunities for various criminal activities to pervade the Internet have led to the growth and development of cyber criminology as a distinct discipline within the criminology framework. This volume explores all aspects of this nascent field and provides a window on the future of Internet crimes and theories behind their origins.

 

Índice

Foreword
1984
Identity Construction Among Hackers
A Personality Assessment Using
AdultChild Sex Advocacy Websites as Learning Environments for Crime
A Social Learning Perspective
Examining Their Roles in Digital Pirac
The Failed RIAA Strategy to Deter P2P Network Users
A Path Analysis
Adolescent Online Victimization and Constructs of Routine Activities Theory
Typology Etiology and Victims
Online Social Networking and Women Victims
A Routine Activities Framework
Section V
Does Islamic Criminal Law Prohibit Cyber
Legal Obligations and Educational Policy Vacuum
Human Rights Infringement in the Digital

An Examination Using ShortTerm
An Examination of Neutralization and Rationalization Techniques
Empirical Examination of Online Lifestyle Digital Guardians

Otras ediciones - Ver todo

Términos y frases comunes

Sobre el autor (2011)

K. Jaishankar, PhD, is a senior assistant professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Manonmaniam Sundaranar University in Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu, India. He is the founding editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Cyber Criminology and editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Criminal Justice Sciences. He is the founding president of the South Asian Society of Criminology and Victimology (SASCV) and founding executive director of the Centre for Cyber Victim Counselling. Among the recent books he has written and/or co-edited are Cyber Bullying: Profile and Policy Guidelines, International Perspectives on Crime and Justice, Trends and Issues of Victimology, and Crime Victims and Justice: An Introduction to Restorative Principles. He pioneered the development of the new field of cyber criminology and is the proponent of the space transition theory of cyber crimes. His areas of academic competence include cyber criminology, victimology, crime mapping, geographic information systems, communal violence, theoretical criminology, policing, and crime prevention.

Información bibliográfica