
Cybercrime
David S. Wall(Editor)
SAGE Publications Ltd (Publisher)
1st Edition
Will be published approx. on 27. May 2030
Book
Hardback
1664 pages
978-1-4462-7081-3 (ISBN)
Description
Much has been written on the subject of cybercrime over the past two decades. This new Major Work brings together a selection of articles that cover the history, context and future of cybercrime, examining the relevant criminal behaviour, law and policing attached to its many forms. The set is divided into four volumes, ensuring a comprehensive spread of topics.
Each volume opens with newly-written introductions that contextualize the articles and make clear the structure and rationale of the set. The result is a thorough and insightful collection of the key literature on cybercrime, making this a perennially valuable resource for scholars in the field.
Each volume opens with newly-written introductions that contextualize the articles and make clear the structure and rationale of the set. The result is a thorough and insightful collection of the key literature on cybercrime, making this a perennially valuable resource for scholars in the field.
More details
Series
Edition
Four-Volume Set
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-4462-7081-3 (9781446270813)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
David S. Wall, PhD is Professor of Criminology in the Centre for Criminal Justice Studies, School of Law, University of Leeds, UK where he conducts interdisciplinary research into CyberCrimes in the Cloud, Ransomware, Policing Cybercrime, and Organised Cybercrime and Cybersecurity. He has published a wide range of articles and books on these subjects over a 25-year period. He is currently researching the impact of Ransomware and Big Data Crimes upon the cybersecurity threat landscape and is modelling the cybercrime ecosystem for various research projects. He works with economists, psychologists, lawyers, computer scientists and software engineers on AI and ML as well as various agencies across Europe and their various practitioner and policy communities. He has been a member of various Governmental working groups on Cybercrime and more recently with the UNODC Expert Groups on various cybercrime initiatives.