000 09506nam a2200493Ii 4500
001 9781839828508
003 UtOrBLW
005 20240507074527.0
006 m o d
007 cr un|||||||||
008 210621t20212021enk obf 001 0 eng d
020 _a9781839828508
_q(e-book)
040 _aUtOrBLW
_beng
_erda
_cUtOrBLW
050 4 _aHV6773.15.O58
_bB35 2021
072 7 _aSOC051000
_2bisacsh
072 7 _aJKV
_2bicssc
080 _a343.4
082 0 4 _a364.153
_223
100 1 _aBailey, Jane,
_eauthor.
245 1 4 _aThe Emerald international handbook of technology-facilitated violence and abuse /
_cJane Bailey, Asher Flynn, Nicola Henry.
264 1 _aBingley, U.K. :
_bEmerald Publishing Limited,
_c[2021]
264 4 _c©2021
300 _a1 online resource (944 pages).
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _acomputer
_bc
_2rdamedia
338 _aonline resource
_bcr
_2rdacarrier
490 1 _aEmerald studies in digital crime, technology and social harms
500 _aIncludes index.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 0 _aIntroduction / Jane Bailey, Nicola Henry, and Asher Flynn -- section 1. TFVA across a spectrum of behaviors: Chapter 1. Introduction / Jane Bailey. Chapter 2. Is it actually violence? : framing technology-facilitated abuse as violence / Suzanne Dunn. Chapter 3. "Not the Real World" : exploring experiences of online abuse, digital dualism, and ontological labor / Chandell Gosse. chapter 4. Polyvictimization in the lives of North American female university/college students : the contribution of technology-facilitated abuse / Walter S. DeKeseredy, Danielle M. Stoneberg, and Gabrielle L. Lory. Chapter 5. The nature of technology-facilitated violence and abuse among young adults in Sub-Saharan Africa / Olusesan Ayodeji Makinde, Emmanuel Olamijuwon, Nchelem Kokomma Ichegbo, Cheluchi Onyemelukwe, and Michael Gboyega Ilesanmi. Chapter 6. The face of technology-facilitated aggression in New Zealand : exploring adult aggressors' behaviors / Edgar Pacheco, and Neil Melhuish. Chapter 7. Missing and murdered indigenous women crisis : technological dimensions / Jane Bailey, and Sara Shayan. Chapter 8. Attending to Difference in indigenous people's experiences of cyberbullying : towards a research agenda / Bronwyn Carlson, and Ryan Frazer -- section 2. Text-based harms: chapter 9. Introduction / Nicola Henry. Chapter 10. "Feminism is eating itself" : women's experiences and perceptions of lateral violence online / Emma A. Jane. chapter 11. Claiming victimhood : victims of the "transgender agenda" / Ben Colliver. Chapter 12. Doxxing : a scoping review and typology / Briony E. Anderson, and Mark A. Wood. chapter 13. Creating the other in online interaction : othering online discourse theory / Elina Vaahensal. Chapter 14. Text-based (sexual) abuse and online violence against women : towards law reform? / Kim Barker, and Olga Jurasz -- section 3. Image-based harms. Chapter 15. Introduction / Nicola Henry. Chapter 16. Violence trending : how socially transmitted content of police misconduct impacts reactions towards police among American youth / Madeline Novich, and Alyssa Zduniak. Chapter 17. Just fantasy? : online pornography's contribution to experiences of harm / Samantha Maree Keene. Chapter 18. Intimate image dissemination and consent in a digital age : perspectives from the front line / Olga Marques -- section 4. Dating apps. Chapter 19. Introduction / Asher Flynn. Chapter 20. Understanding experiences of sexual harms facilitated through dating and hook up apps among women and girls / Elena Cama. chapter 21. "That's straight-up rape culture" : manifestations of rape culture on Grindr / Christopher Dietzel. Chapter 22. Navigating privacy on gay-oriented mobile dating apps / Ari Ezra Waldman -- section 5. Intimate partner violence & digital coercive control. Chapter 23. Introduction / Jane Bailey. Chapter 24. Digital coercive control and spatiality : rural, regional, and remote women's experience / Bridget Harris, and Delanie Woodlock. Chapter 25. Technology-facilitated violence against women in Singapore : key considerations / Laura Vitis. Chapter 26. Technology as both a facilitator of and response to youth intimate partner violence : perspectives from advocates in the global-south / Gisella Ferreira Lopes. Chapter 27. Technology-facilitated domestic abuse and culturally and linguistically diverse women in Victoria Australia / Yee Man Louie -- section 6. Legal responses: chapter 28. Introduction / Jane Bailey. chapter 29. Human rights, privacy rights and technology-facilitated violence / Elizabeth Coombs. Chapter 30. Combating cyber violence against women and girls : an overview of the legislative and policy reforms in the Arab Region / Sukaina Al-Nasrawi. Chapter 31. Image-based sexual abuse : a comparative analysis of criminal law approaches in Scotland and Malawi / Seonaid Stevenson-McCabe and Sarai Chisala-Tempelhoff. Chapter 32. Revenge pornography and rape culture in Canada's non-consensual distribution case law / Moira Aikenhead. Chapter 33. Reasonable expectations of privacy in an era of drones and deepfakes : expanding the Supreme Court of Canada's decision in R v Jarvis / Kristen Thomasen, and Suzanne Dunn. Chapter 34. Doxing and the challenge to legal regulation : when personal data becomes a weapon / Anne Cheung. chapter 35. The potential of centralized and statutorily-empowered bodies to advance a survivor-centered approach to technology-facilitated violence against women / Pam Hrick -- section 7. Responses beyond law: Chapter 36. Introduction / Asher Flynn. Chapter 37. Technology-facilitated violence against women and girls in public and private spheres : moving from enemy to ally / Alison J. Marganski, and Lisa A. Melander. Chapter 38. As Technology evolves, so does domestic violence : modern-day tech abuse and possible solutions / Eva PenzeyMoog, and Danielle C. Slakoff. Chapter 39. Threat modeling intimate partner violence : tech abuse as a cybersecurity challenge in the internet of things / Julia Slupska, and Leonie Maria Tanczer. Chapter 40. Justice on the digitized field : analyzing online responses to technology-facilitated informal justice through social network analysis / Ella Broadbent, and Chrissy Thompson. Chapter 41. Bystander apathy and intervention in the era of social media / Robert D. Lytle, Tabrina M. Bratton, and Heather K. Hudson. Chapter 42. "I need you all to understand how pervasive this issue is" : user efforts to regulate child sexual offending on social media / Michael Salter, and Elly Hanson. Chapter 43. Governing Image-based sexual abuse : digital platform policies, tools, and practices / Nicola Henry, and Alice Witt. Chapter 44. Calling all stakeholders : an intersectoral dialogue about collaborating to end tech-facilitated violence and abuse / Jane Bailey, and Raine Liliefeldt. Chapter 45. Pandemics and systemic discrimination : technology-facilitated violence and abuse in an era of COVID-19 and antiracist protest / Jane Bailey, Asher Flynn, and Nicola Henry.
520 _aThe ebook edition of this title is Open Access and freely available to read online Digital technologies have led to many important social and cultural changes worldwide, but they are also implicated in the facilitation of violence and abuse. While cybercriminality is often described as one of the greatest threats to nation states and global security, the wide range of interpersonal crimes comprising technology-facilitated violence and abuse (TFVA) - including, but not limited to, image-based sexual abuse, hate speech, online sexual harassment and cyberstalking - has received little attention. This handbook features theoretical, empirical, policy and legal analysis of TFVA from over 40 multidisciplinary scholars, practitioners, advocates, survivors and technologists from 17 countries. Addressing a spectrum of abuse perpetrated online, offline and through new technologies, the book sets TFVA in the context of intersecting underlying systemic drivers - including misogyny, racism, classism, colonialism, ableism, ageism, transphobia and homophobia - and discusses ways forward in effectively responding to TFVA. Adopting a holistic approach, it explores a host of issues relating to TFVA, including the nature and experience of harmful and criminal conduct; organisational responses; regulatory, legal and ethical concerns; corporate and social responsibility; justice for victims; bystander intervention; and cultural and social attitudes. The handbook's international, interdisciplinary and intersectoral nature affords opportunities for learning from common experiences, but it also emphasises the equality-affirming importance of avoiding one-size-fits-all analyses that fail to reflect rich and diverse experiences from around the world.
588 0 _aPrint version record.
650 0 _aComputer crimes
_vHandbooks, manuals, etc.
650 0 _aSexual abuse
_vHandbooks, manuals, etc.
650 0 _aOnline sexual predators
_vHandbooks, manuals, etc.
650 7 _aSocial Science, Violence in Society.
_2bisacsh
650 7 _aCrime & criminology.
_2bicssc
700 1 _aFlynn, Asher,
_eauthor.
700 1 _aHenry, Nicola,
_eauthor.
776 0 8 _iPrint version:
_z9781839828492
776 0 8 _iPDF version:
_z9781839828485
830 0 _aEmerald studies in digital crime, technology and social harms.
856 4 0 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1108/9781839828485
999 _c36121
_d36121