1. Introduction: the Internet, cybercrime, and the challenges of the 21st century, Yvonne Jewkes and Majid Yar Part I: Histories and Contexts Introduction 2. Reinterpreting Internet history, James Curran 3. On the globalization of crime: the Internet and new criminality, Barry Sandywell 4. The Internet and everyday life, Vincent Miller 5. Criminalising cyberspace: the rise of the Internet as a 'crime problem', David S. Wall 6. Public perceptions and public opinion about Internet crime, Majid Yar 7. Crime, film and the cybernetic imagination, Craig Webber and Jeff Vass 8. Fiction, fantasy and transformation in the imaginaries of cybercrime: the novel and after, Sheila Brown Part II: Forms of Internet CrimeIntroduction 9. Hackers, viruses and malicious software, Steven Furnell 10. Terror's web: how the Internet is transfroming terrorism, Dorothy E. Denning 11. Cyber-terror: construction, criminalisation and control, Maggie Wykes with Daniel Harcus 12. Cyber-protest and civil society: the internet and action repetoires in social movements, Jeroen Van Laer and Peter Van Aelst 13. Intellectual property crime and the Internet: cyber-piracy and 'stealing' informational intangibles, David S. Wall and Majid Yar 14. Identity theft and fraud, Russell Smith 15. The sex industry, regualtion and the Internet, Teela Sanders 16. Online sexual exploitation of children and young people, Jo Bryce 17. Child Pornography, Ethel Quayle 18. Harm, suicide and homicide in cyberspace: assessing causality and control, Maggie Wykes Part III: Internet Law and Regulation Introduction 19. The emergence of computer law, Martin Wasik 20. Recent developments in UK cybercrime law, Lilian Edwards, Judith Rauhofer and Majid Yar 21. Recent developments in US Internet law, Susan W. Brenner 22. Trans-national developments in Internet law, Katherine S. Williams 23. Online surveillance and personal liberty, Mike McGuire Part IV: Policing the Internet Introduction 24. Public policing and Internet crime, Yvonne Jewkes 25. The private policing of Internet crime, Majid Yar 26. The virtual Neighbourhood Watch: netizens in action, Matthew Williams 27. Internet technologies and criminal justice, Janet Chan, Gerard Goggin and Jasmine Bruce 28. Computer forensics and the presentation of evidence in criminal cases, Ian Walden