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This is a unique interdisciplinary exploration of the contemporary
phenomenon of online medicine purchasing. In this research, Sugiura
provides a criminological understanding of the sale of online
medicines as well as the traditional illegal markets. Crucially,
the practice is investigated from the perspective of web users,
moving beyond the headlines and warning campaigns to contextualise
the provision of medicines online, to describe this practice and
subjective accounts of purchasing medicines from the Web. Drawing
together established deviance theories, Respectable Deviance and
Purchasing Medicine Online considers the construction of online
medicine purchasing, the justifications presented to challenge how
it is labelled, and how the behaviour is managed to show how the
framing of risks and deviance is challenged online. Offering a
much-needed a critical overview of the UK healthcare regulatory
system, Sugiura also analyses literature, data and policy documents
originating from different countries highlighting that the
geographical locations of participants in web forums, online
surveys and non-face-to-face interviews cannot always be verified.
With broad implications for regulation and safety surrounding
medicines online, this innovative and timely study contributes to
current online healthcare debates and broadens our understanding of
cybercrime. It will be of particular interest to scholars of
cybercrime and those interested in the changing nature of deviance.
This handbook provides a comprehensive treatise of the concepts and
nature of technology-facilitated gendered violence and abuse, as
well as legal, community and activist responses to these harms. It
offers an inclusive and intersectional treatment of gendered
violence including that experienced by gender, sexuality and
racially diverse victim-survivors. It examines the types of
gendered violence facilitated by technologies but also responses to
these harms from the perspectives of victim advocates, legal
analyses, organisational and community responses, as well as
activism within civil society. It is unique in its recognition of
the intersecting drivers of inequality and marginalisation
including misogyny, racism, colonialism and homophobia. It draws
together the expertise of a range of established and globally
renowned scholars in the field, as well as
survivor-advocate-scholars and emerging scholars, lending a
combination of credibility, rigor, currency, and innovation
throughout. This handbook further provides recommendations for
policy and practice and will appeal to academics and students in
Criminology, Criminal Justice, Law, Socio-Legal Studies, Politics,
as well as Women's and/or Gender Studies.
Emerging alongside the progression of women's rights in the
twenty-first century is the development of the men's rights
movement, parts of which have culminated into the contemporary
'manosphere.' Consisting of online communities that ascribe to
misogynistic ideologies, which objectify, disparage, and dehumanise
women, the manosphere also houses those who identify as involuntary
celibate (incel). Drawing on ethnographic research and interviews,
this book provides an original and timely insight into the
development of the manosphere, how and why people join and
self-identify as incel, the extent to which the influence and
philosophy of incel and the incelsphere draws on and is penetrating
mainstream culture and political discourse, and its harmful impact.
The Incel Rebellion is essential reading for a broad range of
practitioners and scholars across criminology, sociology, terrorism
studies, gender, media and cultural studies, and politics, as well
as expanding the field of cybercrime research and beyond. The ebook
edition of this title is Open Access, thanks to Knowledge Unlatched
funding, and freely available to read online.
This is a unique interdisciplinary exploration of the contemporary
phenomenon of online medicine purchasing. In this research, Sugiura
provides a criminological understanding of the sale of online
medicines as well as the traditional illegal markets. Crucially,
the practice is investigated from the perspective of web users,
moving beyond the headlines and warning campaigns to contextualise
the provision of medicines online, to describe this practice and
subjective accounts of purchasing medicines from the Web. Drawing
together established deviance theories, Respectable Deviance and
Purchasing Medicine Online considers the construction of online
medicine purchasing, the justifications presented to challenge how
it is labelled, and how the behaviour is managed to show how the
framing of risks and deviance is challenged online. Offering a
much-needed a critical overview of the UK healthcare regulatory
system, Sugiura also analyses literature, data and policy documents
originating from different countries highlighting that the
geographical locations of participants in web forums, online
surveys and non-face-to-face interviews cannot always be verified.
With broad implications for regulation and safety surrounding
medicines online, this innovative and timely study contributes to
current online healthcare debates and broadens our understanding of
cybercrime. It will be of particular interest to scholars of
cybercrime and those interested in the changing nature of deviance.
This handbook provides a comprehensive treatise of the concepts and
nature of technology-facilitated gendered violence and abuse, as
well as legal, community and activist responses to these harms. It
offers an inclusive and intersectional treatment of gendered
violence including that experienced by gender, sexuality and
racially diverse victim-survivors. It examines the types of
gendered violence facilitated by technologies but also responses to
these harms from the perspectives of victim advocates, legal
analyses, organisational and community responses, as well as
activism within civil society. It is unique in its recognition of
the intersecting drivers of inequality and marginalisation
including misogyny, racism, colonialism and homophobia. It draws
together the expertise of a range of established and globally
renowned scholars in the field, as well as
survivor-advocate-scholars and emerging scholars, lending a
combination of credibility, rigor, currency, and innovation
throughout. This handbook further provides recommendations for
policy and practice and will appeal to academics and students in
Criminology, Criminal Justice, Law, Socio-Legal Studies, Politics,
as well as Women's and/or Gender Studies.
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