
Mobile Networks and Cloud Computing Convergence for Progressive Services and Applications
3 contributors - Hardback
£196.00
Aaron Fichtelberg, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice at the University of Delaware. He has written several books on criminal justice with a focus on international and transnational criminal justice. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree from University of California, San Diego, a Ph.D. from Emory University, and an LLM in Public International Law from Utrecht University. He is the author of Law at the Vanishing Point: A Philosophical Analysis of International Law, and Hybrid Tribunals: A Comparative Examination among other works. He has also published in journals such as The Journal of International Criminal Justice, The Netherlands Yearbook of International Law, and Crime, Law, and Social Change.
Nicole Fox, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in the Division of Criminal Justice at California State University, Sacramento. She researches how racial and ethnic violence impacts communities and teaches on comparative criminal justice, criminolgial theory, and global criminology. Her book, After Genocide: Memory and Reconciliation in Genocide, focuses on how memorials to past atrocity shape healing, community development, and reconciliation for survivors of genocide and genocidal rape. Her scholarship has been published in Social Problems, Social Forces, the Journal for Scientific Study of Religion, Sociological Forum, Societies without Borders, Signs, among others. Her work has generously been supported by the Harry Frank Guggenheim Grant, the National Science Foundation, Andrew Mellon Foundation, and others. She is a delegate for the United Nation's Commission for the Status of Women and contributes annually, bringing students and new delegates.
Kai Lin, Ph.D., is a Lecturer in Criminology from the School of International Studies and Education at the University of Technology Sydney in Australia. He received his Ph.D. from the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice at the University of Delaware. He has published extensively on the topic of international and comparative crime and justice, focusing on the study of interpersonal violence, policing, as well as online offending and victimization. His research publications have appeared in academic journals such as Crime & Delinquency, Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Policing and Society, Asian Journal of Criminology, Sociological Forum, among others.