Dr Shane Horgan S.Horgan2@napier.ac.uk
Lecturer
Dr Shane Horgan S.Horgan2@napier.ac.uk
Lecturer
Dr Sarah Anderson S.Anderson2@napier.ac.uk
Lecturer
This project brings together two of the Co-Investigators’ fields of criminological research: desistance research and cybercrime. These areas currently exist in relative isolation to each other but offer the potential for important insights from cross-fertilisation. This project is concerned with illuminating the ways in which contemporary conceptualisations of desistance from crime - which have largely arisen from traditional, often ‘street’ offending - can help explain the process by which ‘hackers’ leave cyber-dependent crime behind, as well as the limitations of such conceptualisations in this context. This research would help to fill identified gaps in our understanding of how and why people move away from illicit or malicious ‘hacking’. In doing so, it aims to develop a more robust, nuanced and critical understanding of both ‘hacking’ and ‘desistance’.
The project will seek to understand the way in which people who were previously involved in illicit or malicious forms of hacking, narrate their hacking careers, attending to processes of identity-formation and meaning-making. A primary aim of this project is to pilot a multiplicity of approaches to the gathering of personal narratives in order to circumvent the significant challenges of recruitment of people who have been involved in cyber-dependent crime (Hutchings and Holt, 2018; Yar, 2013). In doing so, the research not only intends to offer early insights into the ways in which people narrate their hacking careers, but to pave the way for a future larger-scale research project which would more fully enable exploration of this ground-breaking area.
Type of Project | P04 - Research Charities and Trusts |
---|---|
Status | Project Complete |
Funder(s) | Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland |
Value | £9,321.00 |
Project Dates | Jan 1, 2021 - Oct 31, 2022 |
Cyber Security and the Third Sector in Scotland: a Pilot Project exploring Third Sector awareness and usage of Scottish Government cyber security products and resources Jan 1, 2020 - Mar 31, 2020
The project aims to better understand how the Scottish Government?s cyber products, resources and support more generally are received by a small sample of differing Third Sector organisations. In doing so it will explore how and why these products be...
Read More about Cyber Security and the Third Sector in Scotland: a Pilot Project exploring Third Sector awareness and usage of Scottish Government cyber security products and resources.
Policing a Crisis: A narrative account of pandemic policing, technological opportunities and ethical challenges Oct 1, 2020 - Sep 30, 2025
This PhD Studentship will employ narrative inquiry to map the technological opportunities and ethical challenges faced by Police Scotland when responding to the Pandemic. By inviting frontline officers, managers, and police staff to tell their story...
Read More about Policing a Crisis: A narrative account of pandemic policing, technological opportunities and ethical challenges.
Scoping Seven Nations: Exploring International Assessments and Successes in Third Sector Cyber Maturity and Resilience Jul 29, 2020 - Sep 21, 2020
The project will explore whether, how, and with what results, a number of selected nations assess the cyber maturity of the cyber resilience of their respective voluntary/third sectors. Where relevant materials are available, the project will discuss...
Read More about Scoping Seven Nations: Exploring International Assessments and Successes in Third Sector Cyber Maturity and Resilience.
Mapping Capacities for a Community Policing of Cybercrime and Digital Harm Sep 1, 2021 - Dec 31, 2024
Research exploring cybercrime policing has tended to focus on specialist policing units on the one hand (Harkin, Whelan and Change, 2018), and on the inherent limits of public policing organisations on the other; multi jurisdictional, insufficient tr...
Read More about Mapping Capacities for a Community Policing of Cybercrime and Digital Harm.
Protecting public-facing professionals and their dependents online (3PO) Apr 1, 2022 - Mar 31, 2025
3PO will build an understanding of public-facing professionals -specific risks, harms and privacy needs; co-create advanced tools, mechanisms and solutions that are cognisant of PFP-specific challenges empowering secure participation online; re-confi...
Read More about Protecting public-facing professionals and their dependents online (3PO).
About Edinburgh Napier Research Repository
Administrator e-mail: repository@napier.ac.uk
This application uses the following open-source libraries:
Apache License Version 2.0 (http://www.apache.org/licenses/)
Apache License Version 2.0 (http://www.apache.org/licenses/)
SIL OFL 1.1 (http://scripts.sil.org/OFL)
MIT License (http://opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html)
CC BY 3.0 ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)
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