Fr. 86.00

Copycat Crime - How Media, Technology, Digital Culture Inspire Criminal Behavior

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext Helfgott summarizes the research on copycat crime, explores critical incidents, reviews key court cases, and offers recommendations to decrease media-influenced violence. An impressive achievement. Informationen zum Autor Jacqueline B. Helfgott , PhD, is Professor and Director of the Crime and Justice Research Center in the Seattle University Department of Criminal Justice, Criminology, and Forensics. Her published work includes Criminal Behavior: Theories, Typologies, and Criminal Justice . Klappentext Details the new phenomena of copycat crime inspired by technology and the hyperreality fueled in some people by digital culture and video games. Across her 30-year career in criminology, author Jacqueline Helfgott has watched with fascination and fear as the world has shifted from a place where one-dimensional televised news each evening and newspapers bought each morning provided the only information on crimes and killings. Now, nonstop, instant global news coverage on 24-hour television and the internet enables people to see and replay not only crime, violence, terrorism, and murder coverage provided by journalists in real time, but also Facebook and YouTube feeds filmed by the criminals themselves while perpetrating the crimes.In this riveting text about the consequences of our technical, digital, and cultural changes, Helfgott focuses on how these advances are perpetuating this era's new and more massively deadly acts. The book intertwines vignettes from current events, perpetrator statements, police reports, and current research to show how copycat crimes are linked to media, technology, and our digital culture. Concluding with recommendations to reduce the criminogenic effects of media, technology, and digital culture, this book also includes an appendix listing technology- and media-influenced copycat crimes. Vorwort Details the new phenomena of copycat crime inspired by technology and the hyperreality fueled in some people by digital culture and video games. Zusammenfassung Details the new phenomena of copycat crime inspired by technology and the hyperreality fueled in some people by digital culture and video games. Across her 30-year career in criminology, author Jacqueline Helfgott has watched with fascination and fear as the world has shifted from a place where one-dimensional televised news each evening and newspapers bought each morning provided the only information on crimes and killings. Now, nonstop, instant global news coverage on 24-hour television and the internet enables people to see and replay not only crime, violence, terrorism, and murder coverage provided by journalists in real time, but also Facebook and YouTube feeds filmed by the criminals themselves while perpetrating the crimes.In this riveting text about the consequences of our technical, digital, and cultural changes, Helfgott focuses on how these advances are perpetuating this era's new and more massively deadly acts. The book intertwines vignettes from current events, perpetrator statements, police reports, and current research to show how copycat crimes are linked to media, technology, and our digital culture. Concluding with recommendations to reduce the criminogenic effects of media, technology, and digital culture, this book also includes an appendix listing technology- and media-influenced copycat crimes. Inhaltsverzeichnis Foreword by Ray Surette Preface Acknowledgments 1. How Media, Technology, and Digital Culture Have Changed Criminal Behavior and Violence 2. How Media and Technology Shape Modus Operandi and Signature Elements of Criminal Behavior 3. The Copycat Effect on Criminal Behavior: A Theory of Copycat and Media-Mediated Crime 4. Case Studies of Copycat and Media-Mediated Crimes 5. Copycat Crime in the Courts: Implications for Civil Rights and Criminal Justice 6. From the Ethical Realm...

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