U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

Identifying online risk markers of hard-to-observe crimes through semi-inductive triangulation: The case of human trafficking in the United States

NCJ Number
305419
Journal
The British Journal of Criminology Volume: 62 Issue: 3 Dated: May 2022 Pages: 639-658
Date Published
May 2022
Length
20 pages
Annotation

This study explores the online linguistic contours of hard-to-observe crimes through a rigorous mixed-methods approach that combines interviews and computational text analysis.

 

Abstract

Since many types of crime are difficult to study because they are difficult to operationalize, hidden from the public, or both, with communication increasingly moving to online domains, recent work has begun to examine whether the online domain contains traces of such hard-to-observe crimes. Using human trafficking in illicit massage businesses as a proof-of-concept, the authors show how this approach, which we call semi-inductive triangulation, meets the empirical contextuality and relationality of crime traces in the online domain. The findings contribute to an emerging field of computational criminology and call for an integration of linguistic approaches in criminology.

Date Published: May 1, 2022