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Organised cybercrime or cybercrime that is organised? An assessment of the conceptualisation of financial cybercrime as organised crime

Organised cybercrime or cybercrime that is organised? An assessment of the conceptualisation of financial cybercrime as organised crime
Organised cybercrime or cybercrime that is organised? An assessment of the conceptualisation of financial cybercrime as organised crime
Criminological research over the last couple of decades has improved our understanding of cybercrimes. However, this body of research is regarded as still theoretically thin and not fully developed; more knowledge on the actors involved, their characteristics, and modus operandi is needed. Some publications have recently suggested that organised crime is or might be involved in cybercrimes, which would have important policing implications, but evidence-based research on this point is still scarce and inconclusive. This article seeks to further this path of inquiry by providing a systematic analysis of 40 cases from the Netherlands, Germany, UK, and US where criminal networks were involved in financial cybercrimes affecting the banking sector, assessing whether and to what extent these criminal networks meet the definitions of organised crime, and discussing the theoretical and policing implications of our findings.
0928-1371
287-300
Leukfeldt, E. Rutger
a4847113-a903-45c8-8c99-5e1c16c1547d
Lavorgna, Anita
6e34317e-2dda-42b9-8244-14747695598c
Kleemans, Edward
7b1bc1a0-bfdd-41a3-bd5e-401942809404
Leukfeldt, E. Rutger
a4847113-a903-45c8-8c99-5e1c16c1547d
Lavorgna, Anita
6e34317e-2dda-42b9-8244-14747695598c
Kleemans, Edward
7b1bc1a0-bfdd-41a3-bd5e-401942809404

Leukfeldt, E. Rutger, Lavorgna, Anita and Kleemans, Edward (2017) Organised cybercrime or cybercrime that is organised? An assessment of the conceptualisation of financial cybercrime as organised crime. European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research, 23 (3), 287-300. (doi:10.1007/s10610-016-9332-z).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Criminological research over the last couple of decades has improved our understanding of cybercrimes. However, this body of research is regarded as still theoretically thin and not fully developed; more knowledge on the actors involved, their characteristics, and modus operandi is needed. Some publications have recently suggested that organised crime is or might be involved in cybercrimes, which would have important policing implications, but evidence-based research on this point is still scarce and inconclusive. This article seeks to further this path of inquiry by providing a systematic analysis of 40 cases from the Netherlands, Germany, UK, and US where criminal networks were involved in financial cybercrimes affecting the banking sector, assessing whether and to what extent these criminal networks meet the definitions of organised crime, and discussing the theoretical and policing implications of our findings.

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Accepted/In Press date: 20 October 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 November 2016
Published date: September 2017
Organisations: Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 401845
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/401845
ISSN: 0928-1371
PURE UUID: e7b110bb-8f26-4b95-a02f-2c1a1ea57635
ORCID for Anita Lavorgna: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8484-1613

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Oct 2016 15:23
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:00

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Contributors

Author: E. Rutger Leukfeldt
Author: Anita Lavorgna ORCID iD
Author: Edward Kleemans

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