The Routledge International Handbook of Online Deviance / edited by Roderick S. Graham [and three others].

Format
Book
Language
English
Εdition
First edition.
Published/​Created
  • Abingdon, England : Routledge, [2025]
  • ©2025
Description
1 online resource (794 pages)

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Subject(s)
Editor
Series
Summary note
Covering a wide range of different online platforms, including social media sites and chatrooms, this volume is a comprehensive exploration of the current state of sociological and criminological scholarship focused on online deviance.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Source of description
  • Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
  • Description based on print version record.
Contents
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Series
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of Figures
  • List of Tables
  • List of Contributors
  • Acknowledgments
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Part I Foundations
  • 1 Routine activities theory as a framework for explaining online victimization: A discussion of contributions, limitations and future work
  • 2 Measuring cybercrime and cyberdeviance in surveys
  • 3 The victim-perpetrator?: A gendered theory of incel digital deviance
  • 4 Ethics of covert surveillance in online deviance research using honeypots
  • 5 Grooming to defraud
  • 6 Perspectives of paid panel survey research in cybercrime victimization and offending: validity of global online market research sampling and data collection
  • 7 Assessing the weight of social capital theory in digital victimization patterns via the Oxford Internet Surveys
  • 8 Methodological and ethical considerations in cyberbullying research
  • 9 Contextual factors of online deception and harmful information: multidisciplinary perspectives
  • 10 Cyber outsiders: Julian Assange and the labelling of online activists
  • 11 Moving from risk factors to positive online behaviors: an integrated behavioral change approach
  • 12 The cultural milieus of online offending
  • Part II Gender, sex, and sexuality
  • 13 Gender gap and online deviance behavior: Is cyberspace democratizing cybercrime?: The case of digital piracy
  • 14 Sextortion online: characteristics, challenges, and pathways forward
  • 15 Online sex work: deviance and innovation
  • 16 The struggle with stigma in sex work: webcam models' strategies for stigma management
  • 17 A sentiment analysis of men's comments on a sex work forum
  • 18 "I do not believe that talking about this kind of stuff is a way to diminish feminist battles." An online controversy in the Italian manosphere.
  • 19 "Is my fear of transphobia just a little out of control?": A qualitative exploration of the use of online forums by trans people
  • 20 Other as self-identity, safety and perception of deviance concerning sexual minorities
  • 21 Female extremists and the role of gender, sex and sexuality
  • Part III Violence and aggression
  • 22 Self-reported ethnic-based cyberbullying victimization in Portugal: prevalence and implications for criminology
  • 23 Moral disaffiliation in cyber incitement to hatred and violence: a discourse semantic approach
  • 24 Follower weaponization: reimagining violence in the technological landscape
  • 25 Attacks on refugee reception centres in Finland between 2015 and 2017-a case analysis of hive terrorism
  • 26 You are un-welcome: caste-based hate speech online
  • 27 What happens on the digital street, stays on the digital street? An examination of provocations, threats, and beefs in the online drill culture in Rotterdam
  • 28 What drives aggressive online behavior among adults?: A literature review and explanatory model integrating individual, situational, and social status determinants
  • 29 Sub theme: methods and data: online deviance through the lens of Sociotechnical Interaction Network (STIN): case study of cyber trolls
  • Part IV Platforms, communities, and culture
  • 30 Interacting with online deviant subcultures: gendered experiences of interviewing incels
  • 31 Legitimisation of grey activities in online space: an example of metal detectorists
  • 32 Collective criminal efficacy in online illicit communities
  • 33 Characteristics of the Dark Web's online drug culture
  • 34 Opinion formation through social networks in the Baby Boomer generation
  • 35 Narratives of blame and absolution: framing and managing digital risks in harmful sharenting practices.
  • 36 The risks of digital governance: automatisation of crime politics
  • Part V Contextualizing online deviance
  • 37 Branding the "bandito influencer": studying cross-platform fame and deviance in the cases of Er Brasiliano and 1727wrldstar
  • 38 Anti-migrant groups in Calais and Dover: protecting online resources while engaging in digital vigilantism and hate speech
  • 39 Doxxing as a deviant behaviour: a critical analysis of Hong Kong's criminal law reform against doxxing activities
  • 40 Addressing cyber deviance in hybrid political systems: insights from Bangladesh
  • 41 Studying nationalism in an online setting: a Russian far-right community on Vkontakte social media platform
  • Index.
ISBN
  • 1-04-009939-4
  • 1-003-27767-5
  • 1-04-009936-X
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