An exploration of crimes related to online dating

This thesis explores crimes related to online dating. After an introduction to online dating crimes (chapter 1), a systematic literature review (chapter 2) looks at current studies considering online dating romance scams. Studies indicate several factors that make victims more vulnerable to these sc...

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Main Author: Davis, Megan
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50971/
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author Davis, Megan
author_facet Davis, Megan
author_sort Davis, Megan
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis explores crimes related to online dating. After an introduction to online dating crimes (chapter 1), a systematic literature review (chapter 2) looks at current studies considering online dating romance scams. Studies indicate several factors that make victims more vulnerable to these scams, such as their romantic beliefs. Techniques used by scammers are also discussed. Chapter 2 collates what is known so far and highlights gaps in the literature: namely the lack of research. Later chapters focus on crimes occurring on face to face dates with an online partner. Chapter 3 provides the first empirical look at these crimes, and explores potential ways of predicting when these crimes will occur. Results indicate that sexual, pressuring, arrogant, or self-deprecating message content is more likely to indicate risk. Chapter 4 uses interpretative phenomenological analysis to obtain rich qualitative information on the experience of sexual assault on dates. It reveals that this experience triggers a range of negative emotions in the victim, and indicates that better education on consent may be an important prevention technique. Finally, chapter 5 presents a critique of the Romantic Beliefs Scale (Sprecher & Metts, 1989), which has been used to measure romantic beliefs of online dating crime victims. The review suggests the scale is adequate for use in predicting who may fall victim to online dating crimes. These studies are then summarised in chapter 6 to provide implications for prevention of online dating crimes and suggests areas of further research.
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spelling nottingham-509712025-02-28T14:04:15Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50971/ An exploration of crimes related to online dating Davis, Megan This thesis explores crimes related to online dating. After an introduction to online dating crimes (chapter 1), a systematic literature review (chapter 2) looks at current studies considering online dating romance scams. Studies indicate several factors that make victims more vulnerable to these scams, such as their romantic beliefs. Techniques used by scammers are also discussed. Chapter 2 collates what is known so far and highlights gaps in the literature: namely the lack of research. Later chapters focus on crimes occurring on face to face dates with an online partner. Chapter 3 provides the first empirical look at these crimes, and explores potential ways of predicting when these crimes will occur. Results indicate that sexual, pressuring, arrogant, or self-deprecating message content is more likely to indicate risk. Chapter 4 uses interpretative phenomenological analysis to obtain rich qualitative information on the experience of sexual assault on dates. It reveals that this experience triggers a range of negative emotions in the victim, and indicates that better education on consent may be an important prevention technique. Finally, chapter 5 presents a critique of the Romantic Beliefs Scale (Sprecher & Metts, 1989), which has been used to measure romantic beliefs of online dating crime victims. The review suggests the scale is adequate for use in predicting who may fall victim to online dating crimes. These studies are then summarised in chapter 6 to provide implications for prevention of online dating crimes and suggests areas of further research. 2018-06-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50971/1/THESIS%20-%20amended%20-%20final.pdf Davis, Megan (2018) An exploration of crimes related to online dating. DForenPsy thesis, University of Nottingham. Online dating; Prevention of sex crimes; dating romance scams; Crime prediction; Online crimes
spellingShingle Online dating; Prevention of sex crimes; dating romance scams; Crime prediction; Online crimes
Davis, Megan
An exploration of crimes related to online dating
title An exploration of crimes related to online dating
title_full An exploration of crimes related to online dating
title_fullStr An exploration of crimes related to online dating
title_full_unstemmed An exploration of crimes related to online dating
title_short An exploration of crimes related to online dating
title_sort exploration of crimes related to online dating
topic Online dating; Prevention of sex crimes; dating romance scams; Crime prediction; Online crimes
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50971/