Covering a wide range of different online platforms, including social media sites and chatrooms, this volume is a comprehensive exploration of the current state of sociological and criminological scholarship focused on online deviance.
Understanding deviance broadly, the handbook acknowledges both an objective normative approach and a subjective, reactivist approach to the topic, putting into sharp relief the distinctions between cybercrime and online deviance on the one hand, and wider concerns of online communities related to online deviance on the other. Divided into five sections, the first section is devoted primarily to scholarship about the theories and methods foundational to exploring online deviance. The second section, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, presents empirical research on expressions of gender, sex, and sexuality in online spaces considered deviant. The third section, Violence and Aggression, highlights scholarship on types of violent communications such as hate speech and cyberstalking. The fourth section, Communities and Culture, describes empirical research on online communities and networks that can be described as deviant by wider society. Lastly, the fifth section, Regional Perspectives, highlights research in which a terrestrial location is impactful to the online phenomena studied.
Providing a window into future scholarship over the next several years and acknowledging the ephemeral nature of research on digital technology, The Routledge International Handbook on Online Deviance is essential reading for students and scholars of Criminology and Sociology focused on deviant online behaviour. It will also appeal to those working in related areas within Internet/Digital Studies, Media/Communication Studies, Psychology, and Cybersecurity.
Covering a wide range of different online platforms, including social media sites and chatrooms, this volume is a comprehensive exploration of the current state of sociological and criminological scholarship focused on online deviance.
Part
1. Foundations
1. Routine activities theory as a framework for explaining online
victimization: a discussion of contributions, limitations and future work,
Troy Smith and Kevin Haines
2. Measuring Cybercrime and Cyberdeviance in Surveys, David Buil-Gil, Nicolas
Trajtenberg, and Marcelo F. Aebi
3. The victim-perpetrator? A gendered theory of incel digital deviance,
Stuart Lucy
4. Ethics of covert surveillance in online deviance research using honeypots,
Francisco J. Castro-Toledo and Ana B. Gómez-Bellvķs
5. Grooming to defraud, Martina Dove
6. Perspectives of paid panel survey research in cybercrime victimization and
offending: Validity of global online market research sampling and data
collection, Katalin Parti, Thomas Dearden, and James Hawdon
7. Assessing the weight of social capital theory in digital victimization
patterns via the Oxford Internet Surveys, Shawn Smith
8. Methodological and ethical considerations on cyberbullying research, Ale
Buar Ruman and Ajda ulc
9. Contextual factors of online deception and harmful information:
Multidisciplinary perspectives, Kristjan Kikerpill, Elisabeth Carter, Marju
Himma-Kadakas, and Sten Hansson
10. Cyber outsiders. Julian Assange and the labeling of online activists,
Vincenzo Scalia
11. Moving from risk factors to positive online behaviors: An integrated
behavioral change approach, Troy Smith, Eric Rutger Leukfeldt, and Steve van
de Weijer
12. The cultural milieus of online offending, Maryja upa
Part
2. Gender, Sex, and Sexuality
13. Gender gap and online deviance behavior. Is cyberspace democratizing
cybercrime? The case of digital piracy, Ana B. Gómez-Bellvķs and Francisco J.
Castro-Toledo
14. Sextortion online: Characteristics, challenges, and pathways forward,
Roberta L. OMalley
15. Online sex work: Deviance and innovation, Aaron Hammes and Danielle
Blunt
16. The struggle with stigma in sex work: Webcam models strategies for
stigma management, Hannah DeLacey
17. A sentiment analysis of mens comments on a sex work forum, Roderick
Graham
18. I do not believe that talking about this kind of stuff is a way to
diminish feminist battles: An online controversy in the Italian manosphere,
Oscar Ricci
19. Is my fear of transphobia just a little out of control?: A qualitative
exploration of the use of online forums by trans people, Susana Avalos
20. Other as selfidentity, safety, and perception of deviance concerning
sexual minorities, Helidth Ravenholm
21. Female extremists and the role of gender, sex and sexuality, Nina
Käsehage and Sybille Reinke de Buitrago
Part
3. Violence and Aggression
22. Self-Reported Ethnic-Based Cyberbullying Victimization in Portugal:
Prevalence and Implications for Criminology, Gloria Fernįndez- Pacheco
Alises, Paula C. Martins, and Sķlvia M. Mendes
23. Moral Disaffiliation in Cyber Incitement to Hatred and Violence: A
Discourse Semantic Approach, Awni Etaywe
24. Follower weaponization: Reimagining violence in the technological
landscape, Alice Fox
25. Attacks on refugee reception centres in Finland in autumn 2015 a case
analysis of hive terrorism, Tommi Kotonen and Heikki Kovalainen
26. You are un-welcome: caste based hate speech online, Shivangi Narayan
27. What happens on the digital street, stays on the digital street? An
examination of provocations, threats, and beefs in the online drill culture
in Rotterdam, R.A. (Robert) Roks and J.B.A. (Jeroen) van den Broek
28. What drives aggressive online behavior among adults? A literature review
and explanatory model integrating individual, situational, and social status
determinants, Lea Stahel
29. Online deviance through the lens of sociotechnical interaction network
(STIN): Case study of Cyber Trolls, Dr Kanika Sharma
Part
4. Communities and Culture
30. Interacting with online deviant subcultures: experiences of interviewing
incels, Jan Christoffer Andersen and Lisa Sugiura
31. Legitimization of Grey Activities in Online Space: An Example of Metal
Detectorists, Dina Brzia
32. Collective Criminal Efficacy in Online Illicit Communities, Taylor
Fisher
33. Characteristics of the dark webs online drug culture, Ari Haasio, Piotr
Siuda and J. Tuomas Harviainen
34. Opinion formation through social networks in the Baby Boomer generation,
Laura Kobsch
35. Narratives of blame and absolution: framing and managing digital risks in
harmful sharenting practices, Anita Lavorgna, Pamela Ugwudike, Morena
Tartari
36. The Risks of Digital Governance: Automatization of Crime Politics,
Veronika Nagy
Part
5. Regional Perspectives
37. Branding the Bandito Influencer: Studying Cross-Platform Fame and
Deviance in the Cases of Er Brasiliano and 1727WrldStar, Nicola Bozzi and
Stefano Brilli
38. Anti-migrant groups in Calais and Dover: protecting online resources
while engaging in digital vigilantism and hate speech, Matthijs Gardenier
39. Doxxing as a Deviant Behaviour: A Critical Analysis of Hong Kongs
Criminal Law Reform Against Doxxing Activities, Aaron Wong, Paul Vinod
Khiatani, and Wing Hong Chui
40. Addressing Cyber Deviance in Hybrid Political Systems: Insights from
Bangladesh, Syed Mahfujul Haque Marjan
41. Studying nationalism in an online setting: A Russian far-right community
in Vkontakte social media platform, Petr Oskolkov
Roderick S. Graham is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice at Old Dominion University.
Stephan G. Humer is Professor and Director of the Internet Sociology Department at Fresenius University of Applied Sciences Berlin. He was the first Chairman of Netzwerk Terrorismusforschung e. V. (Terrorism Research Network) and is now acting as Coordinator of Advanced Research.
Claire Seungeun Lee is an Associate Professor in the School of Criminology and Justice Studies, a member of the Center for Internet Security and Forensics Education and Research (iSAFER), and a Core Personnel of the Center for Asian American Studies at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, USA.
Veronika Nagy is an Assistant Professor at the Willem Pompe Institute for Criminal Law and Criminology, Netherlands. Nagys research interests include surveillance, digital inequality, criminalization, and self-censorship.