03910nam 22005773 450 991101129170332120251022101410.09783111062037311106203110.1515/9783111062037(CKB)37742238800041(MiAaPQ)EBC31954031(Au-PeEL)EBL31954031(DE-B1597)638464(DE-B1597)9783111062037(OCoLC)1507698481(EXLCZ)993774223880004120250313d2025 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDe Gruyter Handbook of Digital Criminology1st ed.Berlin/Boston :Walter de Gruyter GmbH,2025.©2025.1 online resource (534 pages)De Gruyter Contemporary Social Sciences Handbooks Series ;v.69783111061931 3111061930 Frontmatter --Table of Content --An introduction to digital criminology --1 Abuse --2 Accessing online communities --3 Affordances --4 Agency --5 Algorithm --6 App-based textual interviews --7 Archives --8 Art as method --9 Artificial intelligence --10 Automation --11 Bias --12 Big data --13 Biometric failure --14 Borders and border control --15 Categorization and sorting --16 Computation --17 Cybercrime --18 Darknet --19 Data justice --20 Databases --21 Datafication --22 Digilantism --23 Digital --24 DNA / big genome data --25 Error --26 Ethics --27 Facial recognition --28 Financial crime and surveillance --29 Hacking --30 Hate crime and networked hate --31 Identify theft --32 Infrastructures --33 Intelligence --34 Internet of things --35 Interviews with digital objects --36 Labs --37 Low-tech --38 Online courts --39 Online ethnography --40 Platforms --41 Policing --42 Prediction --43 Privacy and data protection --44 Privatization --45 Punishment --46 Recruitment via social media --47 Researching online forums --48 Robots --49 Sentencing and risk assessment algorithms --50 Sex work --51 Smart city --52 Social media --53 Surveillance --54 Synthetic data and generative machine learning --55 Translation --56 Victimization --57 Vulnerability --List of contributorsThe De Gruyter Handbook of Digital Criminology examines how digital devices spread and cut across all fields of crime and control. Providing a glossary of key theoretical, methodological and criminological concepts, the book defines and further establishes a vibrant and rapidly developing field. At the same time, Digital Criminology is not only presented as a novelty, but also as a continuation of the discipline's history. Each chapter can be read as a free-standing contribution or texts can be combined to gain a more holistic understanding of Digital Criminology or to design a research project. Expert contributions vary from Criminology, Sociology, Law, Science and Technology Studies, to Information Science and Digital Humanities. Together, these supply readers with rich and original perspectives on the digitization of crime and control.De Gruyter Contemporary Social Sciences Handbooks SeriesSOCIAL SCIENCE / GeneralbisacshControl.Crime.Criminology.Digital Criminology.Science and Technology.SOCIAL SCIENCE / General.364.168Kaufmann Mareile1794709Lomell Heidi Mork1851627MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911011291703321De Gruyter Handbook of Digital Criminology4445721UNINA