Digital Criminology: Crime and Justice in Digital Society is an interdisciplinary scholarly investigation extending beyond traditional topics of cybercrime, policing, and the law to consider the implications of digital society for public engagement with crime and justice movements.
"Digital Criminology pushes the boundaries past conventional cybercrime studies by casting its gaze towards the profound transformation of social relations in a 'digital society'. It develops a new programme for criminological inquiry, one that appreciates how the landscapes of crime, justice, and social conflict are being reshaped. Original, ambitious, and challenging - this is an important and timely book." - Majid Yar, Professor of Criminology, Lancaster University
"Digital Criminology provides a bold, critical framework to challenge the existing paradigms of criminological inquiry. The authors reconceptualize the issues in light of the state of the Internet and technology use in the 21st century and propose a new way to view technological deviance that must be read by scholars and practitioners alike." - Thomas J. Holt, Michigan State University
"This volume serves as a foundational primer for a truly technosocial criminology, one that moves beyond narrow conventions of cybercrime and more fully engages the emergent harms, inequalities, justice, and activism that make up global digital societies. Digital Criminology is an interdisciplinary feat - a must-read for anyone who seeks to do work on media and crime in the contemporary moment." - Michelle Brown, University of Tennessee