Cybercrime in Progress: Theory and Prevention of Technology-Enabled Offenses

Cybercrime in Progress: Theory and Prevention of Technology-Enabled Offenses

Contributors

Georgia Southern University faculty member Adam Bossler co-authored Cybercrime in Progress: Theory and Prevention of Technology-Enabled Offenses alongside non-faculty member Thomas J. Holt.

Files

Link to Full Text

Download Full Text

Abstract

The emergence of the World Wide Web, smartphones, and computers has transformed the world and enabled individuals to engage in crimes in a multitude of new ways. Criminological scholarship on these issues has increased dramatically over the last decade, as have studies on ways to prevent and police these offenses. This book is one of the first texts to provide a comprehensive review of research regarding cybercrime, policing and enforcing these offenses, and the prevention of various offenses as global change and technology adoption increases the risk of victimization around the world.

Drawing on a wide range of literature, Holt and Bossler offer an extensive synthesis of numerous contemporary topics such as theories used to account for cybercrime, policing in domestic and transnational contexts, cybercrime victimization and issues in cybercrime prevention. The findings provide a roadmap for future research in cybercrime, policing, and technology, and discuss key controversies in the existing research literature in a way that is otherwise absent from textbooks and general cybercrime readers.

This book is an invaluable resource for academics, practitioners, and students interested in understanding the state of the art in social science research. It will be of particular interest to scholars and students interested in cybercrime, cyber-deviance, victimization, policing, criminological theory, and technology in general.

Publication Date

2016

ISBN for this edition (13-digit)

9781315775944

Cybercrime in Progress: Theory and Prevention of Technology-Enabled Offenses
Back to Faculty Bookshelf

Share

COinS