This paper uses Routine Activity Theory to examine online routine activities and individual level guardianship and the impact on online purchase fraud victimization across Europe. The findings suggest differences between the EU member states in online purchase fraud victimization. Moreover, it discovers that several online routine activities rise the victimization rate. However individual level guardianship has no great success in reducing victimization rates
Prior research on cybercrime victimization has generally emphasized the linkage between the frequenc...
This paper analyzes the correlates of traditional (burglary, vehicle theft, theft from vehicles, and...
This paper explores factors that may explain online banking fraud victimization. The routine activit...
This paper uses Routine Activity Theory to examine online routine activities and individual level gu...
This study investigates the relationships between users' routine activities and socio-economic chara...
Online fraud is the most prevalent acquisitive crime in Europe. This study applies routine activitie...
Objectives: The purpose of the current study was to extend recent work aimed at applying routine act...
Using a sample of online consumers, an examination of routine activities theory and the general theo...
Objectives: The purpose of the current study was to extend recent work aimed at applying routine act...
This study tests the assumptions of the routine activity theory on three online forms of victimizati...
Economic forms of cybercrime affect millions of people around the world. Preparatory crimes such as ...
Although a relatively simple form of hacking, website defacement can have severe consequences both f...
The expansion of online social networking sites and the relative accessibility to personal informati...
Little attention has been given to empirically-tested theoretical frameworks of adolescents’ risk fo...
Why do mainstream consumers who would not typically engage in illegal behaviour routinely resort to ...
Prior research on cybercrime victimization has generally emphasized the linkage between the frequenc...
This paper analyzes the correlates of traditional (burglary, vehicle theft, theft from vehicles, and...
This paper explores factors that may explain online banking fraud victimization. The routine activit...
This paper uses Routine Activity Theory to examine online routine activities and individual level gu...
This study investigates the relationships between users' routine activities and socio-economic chara...
Online fraud is the most prevalent acquisitive crime in Europe. This study applies routine activitie...
Objectives: The purpose of the current study was to extend recent work aimed at applying routine act...
Using a sample of online consumers, an examination of routine activities theory and the general theo...
Objectives: The purpose of the current study was to extend recent work aimed at applying routine act...
This study tests the assumptions of the routine activity theory on three online forms of victimizati...
Economic forms of cybercrime affect millions of people around the world. Preparatory crimes such as ...
Although a relatively simple form of hacking, website defacement can have severe consequences both f...
The expansion of online social networking sites and the relative accessibility to personal informati...
Little attention has been given to empirically-tested theoretical frameworks of adolescents’ risk fo...
Why do mainstream consumers who would not typically engage in illegal behaviour routinely resort to ...
Prior research on cybercrime victimization has generally emphasized the linkage between the frequenc...
This paper analyzes the correlates of traditional (burglary, vehicle theft, theft from vehicles, and...
This paper explores factors that may explain online banking fraud victimization. The routine activit...