How cyber breeds crime and criminals

Abstract
Understanding how cyber breeds novel crime and new criminals is a contribution to criminological models with significant applied value. It is highly important for law enforcement and particularly pivotal for preventive intervention. In this paper we propose a human rights-based crime definition, present explanatory models for cybercrime, and outline future arenas and drivers to suggest to the stakeholder community prevention focuses and priorities. The presented work ultimately aims towards supporting two crime preventive design initiatives, one targeted at accounting for and narrowing the cybercriminal space of means, opportunities, and motives; the other aiming at augmenting early and proactive adaptation of crime legislation. Finally, life-based and agile design paradigms are briefly introduced as suitable methods to be pursued in future research and developmental projects.
Main Authors
Format
Conferences Conference paper
Published
2014
Subjects
Publication in research information system
Publisher
The Society of Digital Information and Wireless Communications (SDIWC)
Original source
http://sdiwc.net/digital-library/request.php?article=b2aba93ca73232d1cbd5ae79b05489b9
The permanent address of the publication
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201408062291Use this for linking
Parent publication ISBN
978-0-9891305-7-8
Review status
Peer reviewed
Conference
International Conference on Digital Security and Forensics
Language
English
Is part of publication
DigitalSec 2014 Proceedings : The International Conference on Digital Security and Forensics
Citation
License
Open Access

Share