Cybercrime : key issues and debates
By: Gillespie, Alisdair A.
Publisher: New York Routledge 2019Edition: 2nd Edition.Description: vii,381p.ISBN: 9781138541788.Subject(s): Crime--Computer -- Internet -- Law and legislation -- Great BritainDDC classification: 345.410268 Summary: The second edition, Cybercrime: Key Issues and Debates provides a valuable overview of this fast-paced and growing area of law. As technology develops and internet-enabled devices become ever more prevalent, new opportunities exist for that technology to be exploited by criminals. One result of this is that cybercrime is increasingly recognised as a distinct branch of criminal law. The book offers readers a thematic and critical overview of cybercrime, introducing the key principles and clearly showing the connections between topics as well as highlighting areas subject to debate. Written with an emphasis on the law in the UK but considering in detail the Council of Europe's important Convention on Cybercrime, this text also covers the jurisdictional aspects of cybercrime in international law. Themes discussed include crimes against computers, property, offensive content, and offences against the person, and, new to this edition, cybercrime investigation.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | NASSDOC Library | 345.410268 GIL-C (Browse shelf) | Available | 50943 |
Browsing NASSDOC Library Shelves Close shelf browser
345.052 HUF-P Policing global regions : | 345.056 COL-P The Presumption of Innocence in International Human Rights and Criminal Law / | 345.0772026 SEN; Sentencing and society : international perspectives | 345.410268 GIL-C Cybercrime | 345.510231 COO-C The cultural revolution on trial : | 345.54 PIL-; Double jeopardy protection: a comparative overview | 345.54 PIL-; Double jeopardy protection: a comparative overview |
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The second edition, Cybercrime: Key Issues and Debates provides a valuable overview of this fast-paced and growing area of law. As technology develops and internet-enabled devices become ever more prevalent, new opportunities exist for that technology to be exploited by criminals. One result of this is that cybercrime is increasingly recognised as a distinct branch of criminal law. The book offers readers a thematic and critical overview of cybercrime, introducing the key principles and clearly showing the connections between topics as well as highlighting areas subject to debate. Written with an emphasis on the law in the UK but considering in detail the Council of Europe's important Convention on Cybercrime, this text also covers the jurisdictional aspects of cybercrime in international law. Themes discussed include crimes against computers, property, offensive content, and offences against the person, and, new to this edition, cybercrime investigation.
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