Fear of Cybercrime: Lessons for the Global E-Banking Sector

Publisher:
Ian Randle Publishers Ltd
Publication date:
2015-03-18
Authors:

(Head of the Department of Government at The University of the West Indies, Mona. His research focuses on research methodologies; governance and public policy; and digital transformation)

(Fellow at the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies, University of the West Indies, Cave Hill. He has been working on issues related to crime and violence in the Caribbean for over a decade)

(Assistant Lecturer in the Department of Government at the University of the West Indies, Mona)
ISBN:
978-976-637-864-6

Description:

We all do business online in one form or another and in this new globalised dispensation, e-Banking has helped to vastly enhance the symbiotic relationship between banks and their customers. But, there are also challenges; some technological in the form of hardware and software deficiencies and some non-technological such as issues of consumer trust and confidence and access to ICTs. One threat not addressed in the electronic banking literature however, is Fear. In Fear of Cybercrime: Lessons for the Global E-Banking Sector, Lloyd Waller, Corin Bailey and Stephen Johnson address this gap by examining the extent to which fear of cybercrime threatens e-banking. How persons view crime, how much they fear it and their responding actions are examined in the context of the pervasiveness of information technology and the influence of news media. A must-read for bankers and policymakers in particular, but also for academics, Fear of Cybercrime is a useful tool in guiding industry players as to the strategies necessary to lower consumer risk perception and increase protection of personal data.

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