Linked e-resources

Details

1. Introduction to Part I Anita Lavorgna and Thomas J. Holt
2. Epistemologies of cyberspace: notes for interdisciplinary research, Anita Lavorgna
3. The how and why of cybercrime: the EU as a case study of the role of ideas, interests and institutions as drivers of a security-governance approach, Benjamin Farrand and Helena Carrapico
4. Programming the criminologist: developing cyber skills to investigate cybercrime, Ruth McAlister and Fabian Campbell-West
5. Profiling and predictions. Challenges in cybercrime research datafication, Bart Custers
6. Data-driven technologies in Justice Systems: Intersections of power, data configurations, and knowledge production, Pamela Ugwudike
7. Introduction to Part II, Anita Lavorgna and Thomas J. Holt
8. The challenges of empirically comparing cybercriminals and traditional offenders, Marleen Weulen Kranenbarg
9. Breaking the walls of silence: analyzing criminal investigations to improve our understanding of cybercrime E. Rutger Leukfeldt and Edward R. Kleemans
10. Using digital open source and crowdsourced data in studies of deviance and crime, Rajeev V. Gundur, Mark Berry and Dean Taodang
11. Developing open-source databases from online sources to study online and offline phenomena, Emily Ann Greene-Colozzi, Joshua D. Freilich and Steven M. Chermak
12. Too much data? Opportunities and challenges of large datasets and cybercrime, Jack Hughes, Yi Ting Chua and Alice Hutchings
13. Use of Artificial Intelligence to support cybercrime research, Stuart E. Middleton
14. Honeypots for cybercrime research, Robert C. Perkins and C. Jordan Howell
15. Social and semantic online networks, Elena Pavan
16. Digital ethnography in cybercrime research: some notes from the virtual field, Nicholas Gibbs and Alexandra Hall
17. The meme is the method: examining the power of the image within extremist propaganda, Ashton Kingdon
18. Introduction to Part III, Anita Lavorgna and Thomas J. Holt
19. Researching cybercrime in the European Union: asking the right ethics questions, Francisco J. Castro-Toledo and Fernando Miro-Llinares
20. Ethical approaches to studying cybercrime: considerations, practice and experience in the United Kingdom, Brian Pickering, Silke Roth and Craig Webber
21. Conducting ethical research with online populations in the United States, Kacy Amory and George Burruss
22. Investigating the ethical boundaries for online research in Brazil, Felipe Cardoso Moreira de Oliveira
23. Ethics and internet-based cybercrime research in Australia, James Martin
24. Researching crime and deviance in Southeast Asia: challenges and ethics when using online data, Lennon Yao-Chung Chang and Souvik Mukherjee
25. The ethics of web crawling and web scraping in cybercrime research: navigating issues of consent, privacy and other potential harms associated with automated data collection, Russell Brewer, Bryce Westlake, Tahlia Hart and Omar Arauza
26. Does the institution have a plan for that? Researcher safety and the ethics of institutional responsibility, Ashley A. Mattheis and Ashton Kingdon
27 Engaging with incels: reflexivity, identity and the female cybercrime ethnographic researcher, Lisa Sugiura
28. Personal reflections on researching fraud: challenges surrounding the ethics of "doing", Cassandra Cross
29. At the intersection of digital research and sexual violence: insights on gaining informed consent from vulnerable participants, Tully ONeil
30. Concluding thoughts, Anita Lavorgna and Thomas J. Holt.

Browse Subjects

Show more subjects...

Statistics

from
to
Export