Description |
1 online resource (723 pages) |
Series |
Routledge International Handbooks |
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Routledge international handbooks.
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Contents |
Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; List of figures; List of images; List of tables; Notes on contributors; Introduction; Part I Technology, crime and justice: theory and history; 1 Theorizing technology and its role in crime and law enforcement; 2 Technology crime and technology control: contexts and history; Part II Technology, crime and harm; Section 1 Information communication technologies (ICTs) and digital crime; 3 The evolving landscape of technology-dependent crime; 4 Technology and fraud: the 'fraudogenic' consequences of the Internet revolution |
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5 ICTs and child sexual offending: exploitation through indecent images6 ICTs and sexuality; 7 ICTs and interpersonal violence; 8 Online pharmacies and technology crime; 9 The theft of ideas as a cybercrime: downloading and changes in the business model of creative arts; 10 ICTs, privacy and the (criminal) misuse of data; Section 2 Chemical and biological technologies and crime; 11 Crime and chemical production; 12 Pharmatechnologies and the ills of medical progress; 13 Bioengineering and biocrime; Keynote discussion; 14 Technology, environmental harm and green criminology |
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Section 3 Wider varieties of technology crime15 Guns, technology and crime; 16 Crime, transport and technology; 17 Food fraud and food fraud detection technologies; 18 Consumer technologies, crime and environmental implications; Keynote discussion: Technology, crime and harm; 19 Evaluating technologies as criminal tools; Part III Technology and control; 20 Crime, situational prevention and technology: the nature of opportunity and how it evolves; 21 Technology, innovation and twenty-first-century policing; 22 Contemporary landscapes of forensic innovation; 23 Technology and digital forensics |
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24 DNA and identification25 Visual surveillance technologies; 26 Big data, predictive machines and security: the minority report; 27 Cognitive neuroscience, criminal justice and control; Keynote discussion: technology and control; 28 The uncertainty principle: qualification, contingency and fluidity in technology and social control; Part IV Technology and the process of justice; 29 Establishing culpability: forensic technologies and justice; 30 Technology-augmented and virtual courts and courtrooms; 31 Computer-assisted sentencing |
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32 The technology of confinement and quasi-therapeutic control: managing souls with in-cell television33 Punitivity and technology; 34 Public and expert voices in the legal regulation of technology; Keynote discussion: technology and the process of justice; 35 The force of law and the force of technology; Part V Emerging technologies of crime and justice; 36 Nanocrime 2.0; 37 AI and bad robots: the criminology of automation; 38 Technology, body and human enhancement: prospects and justice; Keynote discussion: technology and justice; 39 Justice and technology; Index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Criminology.
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Technological innovations.
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Criminal investigation -- Technological innovations
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Criminal justice, Administration of -- Technological innovations
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criminology.
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Criminal investigation -- Technological innovations
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Criminal justice, Administration of -- Technological innovations
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Criminology
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Technological innovations
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Holt, Thomas J., 1978-
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ISBN |
9781317590750 |
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1317590759 |
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