<p>Ground-breaking. Whatever your focus - trafficking and slavery, policing, sentencing, cyber-crime, interpersonal or state violence- this book will change how you understand and interrogate technology and its role in crime and justice. This book isn't about the future, it's about the now, and what will follow. It is rigorous, insightful and exciting. It is essential reading for scholars, students and the general community: we need to take up the challenge offered by this book.</p><p>Associate Professor Marie Segrave, Monash University, Australia</p><p>In "Crime and Punishment in the Future Internet" Sanja Milivojevic invites us to look into the future and actively engage with digital frontier technologies that, as she skilfully shows, bring risks as well as possibilities into our lives. It as a brave and, above all, imaginative book that opens important debates about the nature of crime and punishment that even techno-sceptics and techno-phobes among us can no longer ignore. It made me think- it still does - and this is all one can ask of a book.</p><p>Professor Katja Franko, University of Oslo, Norway</p><p><i>Crime and Punishment in the Future Internet </i>is a remarkable achievement, distilling complex technological concepts and criminological debates into a concise, accessible and highly thought-provoking text. As digilization advances rapidly, Milivojevic's book will be essential reading for students and scholars of Criminology seeking to understand emerging landscapes of technology, crime and control.</p><p>Professor Dean Wilson, University of Sussex</p>
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Sanja Milivojevic is a Research Fellow in Criminology at La Trobe University, Melbourne, and Associate Director of Border Criminologies at Oxford University. Sanja’s research interests include borders and mobility, security technologies and surveillance, gender and victimisation, and international criminal justice and human rights. She is a recipient of Australian and international research grants and was a NSW representative at the Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology’s Committee of Management (2012–2016). Sanja has been a visiting scholar at the University of Oxford, University of Oslo, Belgrade University, and University of Zagreb, as well as a Public Interest Law Fellow at Columbia University’s Law School in New York. Sanja publishes in English and Serbian. Her latest book, Border Policing and Security Technologies, was published by Routledge (2019).