The Internet has been widely acknowledged as facilitating many forms of youth offending. Existing research has identified important drivers of young people’s involvement in online crime, yet this has overwhelmingly relied on school or college samples. As such, it tells us little about those young people that have left the formal education system—a group who are more likely perpetrators of juvenile crime more generally. Focusing on young people’s involvement in online piracy offenses, our analysis draws on data from a nationally representative survey of England and Wales to better understand the dynamics of involvement in online crime across the population. We assess the potential overlaps between online and offline offending, the role of di...
With over 30 million unique users of online music and software swapping services in the United State...
Rates of digital piracy, defined by Gopal, et al. (2004: 3) as ‘the illegal act of copying digital g...
This study explores the relation between online exposure to delinquent behaviour and time spent onli...
The Internet has been widely acknowledged as facilitating many forms of youth offending. Existing re...
Abstract: Internet-based digital piracy has recently become a widespread occurrence. Despite this gr...
The ever ubiquitous spread of information and communication technology (ICT) has enabled an increasi...
This article explores the ways in which young people experience the Internet as a potentially crimin...
The present study examines the relationship between different roles in cyberbullying behaviors (cybe...
This study aimed at evaluating self-control theory in the context of online music piracy by adolesce...
Internet has great influence to most people. It has spread rapidly and one can spend endless hours o...
Why do mainstream consumers who would not typically engage in illegal behaviour routinely resort to ...
The Internet has opened up a Pandora's Box of crime: the proliferation of traditional as well as the...
This study examines similarities and differences between juvenile delinquents of self-reported cyber...
This article offers a socio-technical framework for better understanding youthful attraction to, and...
This study explores the relation between online exposure to delinquent behaviour and time spent onli...
With over 30 million unique users of online music and software swapping services in the United State...
Rates of digital piracy, defined by Gopal, et al. (2004: 3) as ‘the illegal act of copying digital g...
This study explores the relation between online exposure to delinquent behaviour and time spent onli...
The Internet has been widely acknowledged as facilitating many forms of youth offending. Existing re...
Abstract: Internet-based digital piracy has recently become a widespread occurrence. Despite this gr...
The ever ubiquitous spread of information and communication technology (ICT) has enabled an increasi...
This article explores the ways in which young people experience the Internet as a potentially crimin...
The present study examines the relationship between different roles in cyberbullying behaviors (cybe...
This study aimed at evaluating self-control theory in the context of online music piracy by adolesce...
Internet has great influence to most people. It has spread rapidly and one can spend endless hours o...
Why do mainstream consumers who would not typically engage in illegal behaviour routinely resort to ...
The Internet has opened up a Pandora's Box of crime: the proliferation of traditional as well as the...
This study examines similarities and differences between juvenile delinquents of self-reported cyber...
This article offers a socio-technical framework for better understanding youthful attraction to, and...
This study explores the relation between online exposure to delinquent behaviour and time spent onli...
With over 30 million unique users of online music and software swapping services in the United State...
Rates of digital piracy, defined by Gopal, et al. (2004: 3) as ‘the illegal act of copying digital g...
This study explores the relation between online exposure to delinquent behaviour and time spent onli...