E-Book, Englisch, 539 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Progress in Mathematics
Lavorgna / Holt Researching Cybercrimes
1. Auflage 2021
ISBN: 978-3-030-74837-1
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Methodologies, Ethics, and Critical Approaches
E-Book, Englisch, 539 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Progress in Mathematics
ISBN: 978-3-030-74837-1
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Graduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
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 Miró-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 OmarArauza.- 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 O’Neil.- 30. Concluding thoughts, Anita Lavorgna and Thomas J. Holt.