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E-raamat: Human Factor of Cybercrime

Edited by (Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR), Amsterdam, the Netherlands), Edited by (Michigan State University, USA)
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Cybercrimes are often viewed as technical offenses that require technical solutions, such as antivirus programs or automated intrusion detection tools. However, these crimes are committed by individuals or networks of people which prey upon human victims and are detected and prosecuted by criminal justice personnel. As a result, human decision-making plays a substantial role in the course of an offence, the justice response, and policymakers' attempts to legislate against these crimes. This book focuses on the human factor in cybercrime: its offenders, victims, and parties involved in tackling cybercrime.

The distinct nature of cybercrime has consequences for the entire spectrum of crime and raises myriad questions about the nature of offending and victimization. For example, are cybercriminals the same as traditional offenders, or are there new offender types with distinct characteristics and motives? What foreground and situational characteristics influence the decision-making process of offenders? Which personal and situational characteristics provide an increased or decreased risk of cybercrime victimization? This book brings together leading criminologists from around the world to consider these questions and examine all facets of victimization, offending, offender networks, and policy responses.

Chapter 13 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
List of figures
viii
List of tables
ix
List of contributors
x
Preface xv
Rutger Leukfeldt
Thomas J. Holt
PART I Background
1(80)
1 It ain't what it is, it's the way that they do it? Why we still don't understand cybercrime
3(26)
Dr. Michael Mcguire
2 Contributions of criminological theory to the understanding of cybercrime offending and victimization
29(31)
Adam Bossler
3 The open and dark web: facilitating cybercrime and technology-enabled offences
60(21)
Claudia Flamand
David Decary-Hetu
PART II Victims
81(76)
4 Predictors of cybercrime victimization: causal effects or biased associations?
83(28)
Stevevan Deweijer
5 Virtual danger: an overview of interpersonal cybercrimes
111(23)
Jordana Navarro
6 Sexual violence in digital society: understanding the human and technosocial factors
134(23)
Anastasia Powell
Asher Flynn
Nicola Henry
PART III Offenders
157(180)
7 Cybercrime subcultures: contextualizing offenders and the nature of the offence
159(14)
Thomas J. Holt
8 On social engineering
173(21)
Kevin Steinmetz
Richard Goe
Alexandra Pimentel
9 Contrasting cyber-dependent and traditional offenders: a comparison on criminological explanations and potential prevention methods
194(22)
Marleen Weulen Kranenbarg
10 Financial cybercrimes and situational crime prevention
216(24)
Rutger Leukfeldt
Jurjen Jansen
11 Modelling cybercrime development: the case of Vietnam
240(18)
Jonathan Lusthaus
12 Humanizing the cybercriminal: markets, forums, and the carding subculture
258(28)
Craig Webber
Michael Yip
13 The roles of `old' and `new' media tools and technologies in the facilitation of violent extremism and terrorism
286(24)
Ryan Scrivens
Maura Conway
14 Child sex abuse images and exploitation materials
310(27)
Roderic Broadhurst
PART IV Policing
337(88)
15 Policing cybercrime: responding to the growing problem and considering future solutions
339(20)
Cassandra Dodge
George Hurruss
16 Responding to individual fraud: perspectives of the fraud justice network
359(30)
Cassandra Cross
17 The ecology of cybercrime
389(19)
Henoi't Dupont
18 Displacing big data: how criminals cheat the system
408(17)
Alice Hutchings
Sergio Pastrana
Richard Clayton
Index 425
Dr. Rutger Leukfeldt is senior researcher and cybercrime cluster coordinator at the Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR). Furthermore, Rutger is director of the Cybersecurity & SMEs Research Center of the Hague University of Applied Sciences. Over the last decade, Rutger worked on a number of cybercrime studies for the Dutch government and private companies. Rutger is currently the chair of the Cybercrime Working Group of the European Society of Criminology (ESC).

Dr. Thomas J. Holt is a professor in the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University specializing in cybercrime, cyberterrorism, and the police response to these threats. His work has been published in a range of journals, and he is also the author of multiple books and edited works.