2013
DOI: 10.1111/hojo.12006
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Online Child Sex Offenders: Challenges and Counter‐Measures

Abstract: The aim of this article is straightforward and practical: by utilising elements of routine activity and rational choice theories, it explains how online child sex offenders use the Internet and what can be done to counter the challenge they pose. The discussion opens with definitions of child pornography, child erotica, child exploitation material and paedophilia. Its main objective is to promote online protection of children. It is explained that online child sex offenders and paedophiles use the Internet to … Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Two of the most important transformations that the Web has made in the area of crime are the empowerment of the individual, allowing lone offenders to use the power of networks to carry out tasks of unprecedented complexity (and to repeat them many times rapidly), and the affordances for groups or coalitions to form and unform [367]. It is unsurprising that the same affordances that support legal or compulsory behaviour can also be applied to make behaviour that is forbidden or discouraged both easier to carry out and harder to detect or prevent (for a troubling example, see [92]). …”
Section: The Dark Webmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two of the most important transformations that the Web has made in the area of crime are the empowerment of the individual, allowing lone offenders to use the power of networks to carry out tasks of unprecedented complexity (and to repeat them many times rapidly), and the affordances for groups or coalitions to form and unform [367]. It is unsurprising that the same affordances that support legal or compulsory behaviour can also be applied to make behaviour that is forbidden or discouraged both easier to carry out and harder to detect or prevent (for a troubling example, see [92]). …”
Section: The Dark Webmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also need more research that compares the utilization of the Internet to sprout hatred to the way it is being used by other anti-social groups such as paedophiles (Cohen-Almagor 2013) and terrorists. From my interviews with experts on children's safety, terrorism, crime and hate there seem to be many commonalities between the modes of operation of these groups.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consider the domain of online child exploitation, a type of cybercrime that is the subject of widespread concern (Cohen‐Almagor ). A high priority for law enforcement agencies in most advanced industrial societies, online child protection activities are also undertaken by a variety of non‐state actors and institutions, including parents, teachers, non‐government organizations specializing in internet information and education, manufacturers of blocking and filtering software, and self‐appointed internet sleuths, operating individually or in concert.…”
Section: Theoretical Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%