Crime, Genes, Neuroscience and Cyberspace

Owen, Timothy orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-2483-4627 (2017) Crime, Genes, Neuroscience and Cyberspace. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-52687-8

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-52688-5

Abstract

This book applies Owen’s unique genetic-social framework to the study of crime and criminal behaviour, with an emphasis on cybercrime. Moving beyond challenges which confront contemporary criminological theorizing such as: the stagnation of critical criminology, the relativistic nihilism of the ‘cultural turn’, posthumanism, and virtual criminology, the author codifies and ‘applies’ the latest version of the framework to the study of crime, both in and out of cyberspace.

Drawing upon evolutionary psychology, behavioural genetics and the philosophy of Heidegger, he introduces new terms such as ‘Neuro-Agency’ and notions of Embodied Cognition into criminological theorizing. Adopting a soft compatibilist approach to free-will, and Realist ontology, Owen’s meta-theoretical focus provides a new direction for criminological theorizing, in particular in the direction of the conceptualization and prediction of cyber violence. Exciting and timely, this book will appeal to scholars and advanced students of criminology, law, sociology, social policy, psychology, philosophy, policing and forensic investigation.

Contents

Section title
Section author
Page
Introduction
Tim Owen
1
Criminological and Social Theory: Surveying the Contemporary Landscape
Tim Owen
13
Neuroscience and Cybercrime
Tim Owen
69
Do We Need a 'Virtual Criminology'?
Tim Owen
83
Cyber Violence
Tim Owen
103
Codification and Application of the Genetic-Social Framework
Tim Owen
115

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