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
2022: IN: Cyber victimization during the COVID‐19 pandemic: A syndemic looming large
2020: ??: The Psychology of Fraud, Persuasion and Scam Techniques: Understanding What Makes Us Vulnerable
2022: AU: How Frauds in Times of Crisis Target People
2015: AU: No laughing matter: Blaming the victim of online fraud
2020: AU: Reflections on the reporting of fraud in Australia
2018: UK: Cybercrime and You: How Criminals Attack and the Human Factors That They Seek to Exploit
2021: TR: Synthesizing Cybersecurity Issues And Challenges For The Elderly
2020: NL: Reporting cybercrime victimization: determinants, motives, and previous experiences
2021: UK: Identifying and reducing the money laundering risks posed by individuals who have been unknowingly recruited as money rules
2021: US: To Whom Do Victims of Mass-Market Consumer Fraud Complain?
2020: NL: The Dark Figure and the Cyber Fraud Rise in Europe: Evidence from Spain
2019: NG: Fathways and Motivations for Cyber Fraud Involvement among Female Undergraduates of Selected Universities in South-West Nigeria
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: EU: Consumer Fraud against Older Adults in Digital Society: Examining Victimization and Its Impact
2022: US: Exploring Fraudsters Strategies to Defraud Users on Online Employment Databases