Description
This book features the empirical work of internationally known scholars, providing an in-depth examination of the overlap between online and offline victimization and offending.
The vast expanse of the Internet has provided a limitless playground for offenders to prey on those unaware of their predators, or well as those who are intimately familiar with their offenders. However, the Internet does not isolate offenders into mutually exclusive categories. Instead, it has allowed many offenders to use both offline and online platforms to commit crime. It also opened up more opportunity for violation of victims. This volume features two divisions of the American Society of Criminology, the Division of Victimology and Division of Cybercrime, who have joined forces to sponsor a special issue on the overlap between forms of online and offline victimization and offending. International scholars in this book provide a notable spectrum of different forms of this phenomenon, as well as predictors of these behaviors.
The Link between Specific Forms of Online and Offline Victimization will be a key resource for academics, researchers, and advanced students of Victimology, Cybercime, Criminology and Criminal Justice. The chapters included in this book were originally published in Victims & Offenders.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Shelly L. Clevenger and Catherine D. Marcum
1. Intimate Risks: Examining Online and Offline Abuse, Homicide Flags, and Femicide
Freya McLachlan and Bridget Harris
2. Deepfakes and Domestic Violence: Perpetrating Intimate Partner Abuse Using Video Technology Kweilin T. Lucas
3. Assessing the Overlap between Cyberstalking Victimization and Face-to-face Sexual Victimization among South Korean Middle and High School Students
Jaeyong Choi, Brandon Dulisse and Sungil Han
4. Mapping as Harm Reduction: Using GIS to Map Chatter Associated with Sex Work
Ashley E. Towers, Jordana N. Navarro and Thomas J. Holt
5. Self-Control, Risky Behavior, and Dating Application-Facilitated Victimization by Vanessa Centelles, Ráchael A. Powers and Richard K. Moule Jr.
6. Understanding the Overlap of Online Offending and Victimization: Using Cluster Analysis to Examine Group Differences
Katalin Parti, Thomas E Dearden and James Hawdon
7. Exploring Fear of Crime for Those Targeted by Romance Fraud
Cassandra Cross and Murray Lee
8. Online Consumer Fraud Victimization and Reporting: A Quantitative Study of the Predictors and Motives
Catarina Fonseca, Samuel Moreira and Inês Guedes
9. The Financial Leash: Cyberfinancial Abuse within Intimate Relationships
Shelly Clevenger, Jordana N. Navarro and Thomas J. Holt
10. Adapting and Applying Offline Theory to Online Victimization: A Test of the Shadow of Sexual Assault Hypothesis with Fear of Online Victimization
Billy Henson, Bradford W. Reyns and Bonnie S. Fisher
11. Convergence of Traditional and Online Property Crime Victimization in a City with Little Offline Crime
Riccardo Milani, Lorena Molnar, Stefano Caneppele and Marcelo F. Aebi
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