Theoretical Perspectives and Viewpoints: David Wall (1999) "Cybercrimes" - new wine, no bottles?; P.N. Grabosky and Russell G. Smith (2001) "Digital Crime in the 21st Century"; Alan Norrie (2001) "Dialogue and Debate" - the nature of virtual criminality; Wanda Capeller (2001) "Not Such a Neat Net: Some Comments on Virtual Criminality"; Peter N. Grabosky (2001) "Virtual Criminality: Old Wine in New Bottles?"; Francis Snyder (2001) "Sites of Criminality and Sites of Governance"; Graham Greenleaf (1998) "An Endnote on Regulating Cyberspace" - architecture vs law?. Cybercrimes: Amanda Chandler (1996) "The Changing Definition and Image of Hackers in Popular Discourse"; Liz Duff and Simon Gardiner (1996) "Computer Crime in the Global Village" - strategies for control and regulation - in defence of the hacker; Tim Jordan and Paul Taylor (1998) "A Sociology of Hackers"; David Mann and Mike Sutton (1998) "Netcrime" - more change in the organization of thieving; Dorothy E. Denning (2000) "Cyberterrorism" - the logic bomb versus the truck bomb; David L. Speer (2000) "Redefining Borders" - the challenges of cybercrime; George Smith (1998) "An Electronic Pearl Harbour? Not Likely"; Hedieh Nasheri and Timothy O'Hearn (1999) "The Worldwide Search for Techno-thieves" - international competition v. international co-operation; C. David Freedman (1999) "The Extension of the Criminal Law to Protecting Confidential Commercial Information" - comments on the issues and the cyber-context; Louise Ellison and Yaman Akdeniz (1998) "Cyberstalking" - the regulation of harassment on the internet; Matthew Williams (2000) "Virtually Criminal: Discourse, Deviance and Anxiety within Virtual Communities"; Nadine Strossen (2000) "Cybercrimes vs. Cyberliberties"; Clive Walker and Yaman Akdeniz (1998) "The Governance of the Internet in Europe with Special Reference to Illegal and Harmful Content"; Marty Rimm (1995) "Marketing Pornography on the Information Superhighway" - a survey of 917,410 images, descriptions, short stories, and animations downloaded 8.5 million times by consumers in over 2000 cities in forty countries, provinces, and territories; Catharine MacKinnon (1995) "Vindication and resistance" - a response to the Carnegie Mellon study of pornography in cyberspace; Donna Hoffman and Thomas Novak (1995) A detailed analysis of the conceptual, logical, and methodological flaws in the article - "Marketing Pornography on the Information Superhighway"; Jon Spencer (1999) "Crime on the Internet: Its Presentation and Representation". Criminal Justice Processes: Marc D. Goodman (1997) "Why the Police Don't Care about Computer Crime"; David S. Wall (1998) "Policing and the Regulation of the Internet"; P.K. Manning (2001) "Technology's Ways: Information Technology, Crime Analysis and the Rationalizing of Policing"; Janet B.L. Chan (2001) "The Technological Game: How Information Technology is Transforming Police Practice"; Peter Sommer (1998) "Digital Footprints: Computer Evidence".