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PRODID:https://murmitoyen.com/events/vanille/udem/
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UID:69dc1b534a39d
DTSTAMP:20260412T182315
DTSTART:20161101T114500
SEQUENCE:0
TRANSP:OPAQUE
DTEND:20161101T123000
URL:https://murmitoyen.com/events/vanille/udem/detail/720505-young-people-t
 he-internet-and-pathways-into-criminality
LOCATION:Université de Montréal - Carrefour des arts et des sciences\, 31
 50\, rue Jean-Brillant \, Montréal\, QC\, Canada\, H3T 1N8
SUMMARY:Young people\, the Internet\, and pathways into criminality
DESCRIPTION:Guest Speaker : Dr Russel BREWER\nDr Russell Brewer is a Senio
 r Lecturer at Flinders University Law School. His research interests inclu
 de policing\, crime prevention\, Internet crime\, organized crime\, and so
 cial networks. In particular\, his work seeks to establish the significanc
 e of networks as a tool for providing a clearer understanding of the risk 
 factors that lead to deviance\, as well as the structural characteristics 
 of policing responses to criminality. He has a range of publications explo
 ring the in these areas\, including a series of journal articles\, as well
  as a monograph for the Clarendon Series in Criminology\, Oxford Universit
 y Press. He is a founding member of the Centre for Crime Policy and Resear
 ch at Flinders University\, and leads its recently established Digital Cri
 me Laboratory\, which oversees a variety of innovative research projects.
 \nSummaryThis paper examines the ways in which young people first encounte
 r the Internet as a potentially criminogenic medium. The contexts in which
  this occurs are described and analyzed in terms of relative access to dig
 ital technologies and risk of exposure. Given the increasing ubiquity of I
 nternet access in the lives of young people\, we explore how this can lead
  to tentative engagements of a naive or non-criminal kind. We also locate 
 youthful exposure to the Internet within the context of adolescent develop
 ment\, including susceptibility to risk-taking and involvement in delinque
 ncy of different (off-line) kinds. Data from an empirical study of adolesc
 ents residing in a large Australian city will be linked to broader finding
 s discussed.\nInformation \nConférence présentée par le Centre inter
 national de criminologie comparée
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