<p>"This ground-breaking collection of essays will shape our understanding of the gendered intersections of violence and technology, illuminating how technology alters, intensifies, facilitates, and resists gendered violence. Gender, Technology and Violence will be the "go to" book for students, researchers, and activists seeking empirical and theoretical advances in the fields of gendered violence and victimization, and technology and crime. This exceptional compilation of readings by top scholars sets the stage for further research for years to come."</p><p><strong>Marjorie S. Zatz, Professor of Sociology, University of California Merced, USA</strong></p><p>"Segrave and Vitis bring together an impressive collective of international and interdisciplinary scholars to consider how the technologies wrought by the digital revolution present new opportunities for both committing and confronting violence. The authors interrogate how being always connected increases the repertoire of gendered violence to harass, abuse, control, and take revenge, most commonly on women and girls. Yet it also facilitates the organizing of support and community to respond and protect. This volume is engaging, intellectually sophisticated, well researched and written. It will enrage and enlighten readers."</p><p><strong>Mona J.E. Danner, Professor and Chair, Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice, Old Dominion University, USA</strong></p><p>"This interdisciplinary collection of essays offers a refreshing interrogation of the violence–technology–gender nexus. Technology both facilitates and accelerates the creation of new forms of gendered violence that target women (such as the use of GPS tracking devices, social media, hate-speech, revenge porn to extend violence against intimate partners). Chapters within draw attention to how digital media technologies are also used to threaten, intimidate, demean and sexualise public women, such as journalists, politicians, feminists and academics. However, the collection also stresses that technology can also be utilised as a means and strategy to resist gendered based violence. Social media can be deployed to generate counter publics and expose the trolls that demean, sexualise and harass public women. The compendium also explores the responsibility of individuals, service providers, social media providers, governments and communities in responding to technology assisted gendered violence. Prevention is profoundly important because the world wide web has created new spaces where gendered violence can operate outside current laws and modes of regulation. This is an important and timely book with a fresh perspective and deep grasp of a growing problem in a world where technology is coming to shape our daily experiences of humanity."</p><p><strong>Professor Kerry Carrington, Head of School of Justice, Faculty of Law, Queensland University of Technology, Australia</strong></p>