Using Open Data to Detect Organized Crime Threats Factors Driving Future Crime / edited by Henrik Legind Larsen, José María Blanco, Raquel Pastor Pastor, Ronald R. Yager.
2017
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Title
Using Open Data to Detect Organized Crime Threats Factors Driving Future Crime / edited by Henrik Legind Larsen, José María Blanco, Raquel Pastor Pastor, Ronald R. Yager.
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Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2017.
Description
XV, 282 pages 57 illustrations, 48 illustrations in color. : online resource
Formatted Contents Note
Introdution
Part 1: Key Concepts
Organized Crime: Key Concepts
How to Measure Organized Crime
Part 2: Methodology
Foresight and the Future of Crime
Macro Environmental Factors Driving Organized Crime
Future Crime that can be Extracted from Social Media Monitoring
Organized Crime, Wild Cards and Dystopias
Part 3: Use Cases
Human Trafficking Case Study: Operation Golf- Radicalization in a Regional Context
Links Between Organized Crime and Terrorism
Conclusion and Future Research.
Part 1: Key Concepts
Organized Crime: Key Concepts
How to Measure Organized Crime
Part 2: Methodology
Foresight and the Future of Crime
Macro Environmental Factors Driving Organized Crime
Future Crime that can be Extracted from Social Media Monitoring
Organized Crime, Wild Cards and Dystopias
Part 3: Use Cases
Human Trafficking Case Study: Operation Golf- Radicalization in a Regional Context
Links Between Organized Crime and Terrorism
Conclusion and Future Research.
Summary
This work provides an innovative look at the use of open data for extracting information to detect and prevent crime, and also explores the link between terrorism and organized crime. In counter-terrorism and other forms of crime prevention, foresight about potential threats is vitally important and this information is increasingly available via electronic data sources such as social media communications. However, the amount and quality of these sources is varied, and researchers and law enforcement need guidance about when and how to extract useful information from them. The emergence of these crime threats, such as communication between organized crime networks and radicalization towards terrorism, is driven by a combination of political, economic, social, technological, legal and environmental factors. The contributions to this volume represent a major step by researchers to systematically collect, filter, interpret, and use the information available. For the purposes of this book, the only data sources used are publicly available sources which can be accessed legally and ethically. This work will be of interest to researchers in criminology and criminal justice, particularly in police science, organized crime, counter-terrorism and crime science. It will also be of interest to those in related fields such as applications of computer science and data mining, public policy, and business intelligence.
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Language
English
ISBN
9783319527031
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