'Steinmetz performs two impressive feats here – revitalizing realist criminology through an incisive engagement with pragmatism, and then mobilizing it to develop a digital criminology that is both realistic about online harms and critical about the workings of power. The result? A major advance in our understanding of crime and technology.'
Majid Yar, Professor Emeritus of Criminology, Lancaster University
'Intellectually generous and seductively synthetic, Steinmetz’s Against Cybercrime dares to imagine a new criminology of online worlds. Rejecting rigidity and abstraction, he offers instead a powerful mix of realist criminology, cultural criminology, and pragmatism designed to situate the particulars of digital crime within larger contemporary forces.'
Jeff Ferrell, Author ofDrift: Illicit Mobility and Uncertain Knowledge.
'Against Cybercrime is well-thought-out, provocatively written, and provides a timely and exciting contribution to an under-theorized area in criminology. Steinmetz’s "realist criminology of computer crimes" implores us to address the root causes of crime through harm-reduction strategies that avoid increasing state power and surveillance. This is an important book - a must-read for academics and policymakers, alike.'
Jayne Mooney,Professor of Sociology, John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center, CUNY
'Against Cybercrime engages readers in a frank, compelling, and accessible conversation about the need to take computer crimes seriously while taking privacy, freedom, and related matters seriously. Readers will walk away with a greater understanding of the challenges associated with computer crime and demand more concrete solutions, as Steinmetz proposes, than what other cybercriminology perspectives currently provide.'
Jordana Navarro, Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice, The Citadel
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART I: Foundations
Realist Criminology: An Overview
Eschewing Critical Realism
Embracing Pragmatism
PART II: A Realist Criminology of Computer Crime
Toward a Realist Criminology of Computer Crime
The Mundanity of Computational Criminology
Realist Criminological Methods
What Is to be Done about Computer Crime?
Where Do We Go from Here?
Index
Kevin F. Steinmetz is Professor at the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work, Kansas State University, USA.