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Resource materials on technology-enabled crime
Resource materials on technology-enabled crime
Technical and background paper no. 28
Gregor Urbas and Kim-Kwang Raymond Choo
ISBN 978 1 921185 70 0
ISSN 1445-7261
Canberra: Australian Institute of Criminology, February 2008
Abstract
In December 2005, the Australian Institute of Criminology was commissioned
by the Australian High Tech Crime Centre to conduct research into issues
relating to key criminal justice issues concerning technology-enabled crime in
the context of an evolving international and domestic legal and law enforcement
framework. As part of this research, the present resource materials were
prepared to provide a general overview of information on cybercrime to assist
prosecutors and members of the judiciary who may be faced with proceedings
involving computer related offences. While work on computer related crime is
ongoing and is a relatively new field, this compendium aims to present
prosecutors with common terms, concepts, relevant legislation, and current
debates in the academic literature affecting technology-enabled crime cases. In
the short term, computer forensic processes and practice will continue to
evolve, driven by new technologies and software, and the intent nationally and
internationally to standardise evidentiary processes and the science behind
practice. Such dynamism will continue to generate subsequent challenges for
practitioners and the judiciary, and compound the risk that research results
will become rapidly outdated. The work presented in this report, however,
provides a useful summary, offering a solid basis on which to build greater
understanding of e-crime cases and prosecutions that will serve to strengthen
future work and policy debate in this field.