2023: US: How are financial institutions enabling online fraud? A developmental online financial fraud policy review
2023: AU: Why do fraud victims get blamed? Lerner’s Belief in a Just World and its application to victims of online fraud
2023: US: What is a capable guardian to older fraud victims? Comparison of younger and older victims’ characteristics of online fraud utilizing routine activity theory
2023: US: What Money Can Do: Examining the Effects of Rewards on Online Romance Fraudsters’ Deceptive Strategies
2023: AU: More than Money: Examining the Potential Exposure of Romance Fraud Victims to Identity Crime
2023: MY: Thwarting Instant Messaging Phishing Attacks: The Role of Self-Efficacy and the Mediating Effect of Attitude towards Online Sharing of Personal Information
2023: UK: Rethinking Cybercrime Governance and Internet Fraud Eradication In Nigeria
2023: Navigating Privacy and Data Safety: The Implications of Increased Online Activity among Older Adults Post-COVID-19 Induced Isolation
2023: UK: Cybercrime Regulation and Nigerian Youths Increasing Involvement In Internet Fraud: Attacking The Roots Rather Than The Symptoms
2023: SG: Supporting crime script analyses of scams with natural language processing
2023: UK: Self and desired partner descriptions in the online romance scam: a linguistic analysis of scammer and general user profiles on online dating portals
2023: UK: Drug mule for love
2023: EU: Consumer Fraud against Older Adults in Digital Society: Examining Victimization and Its Impact
2023: UK: Tainted love: a systematic literature review of online romance scam research
2023: UK: Youth Unemployment and Cybercrime in Nigeria
2023: AU: ‘Should’ve known better’: Using Lerner’s Belief in a Just World to understand how the Fraud Justice Network observe victims of online romance and investment frauds