Part 1. Co-offending networks
The importance of studying co-offending networks for criminological theory and policy / Jean Marie McGloin and Holly Nguyen
Sex and age homophily in co-offending networks: opportunity or preference? / Sarah B. van Mastrigt and Peter J. Carrington
The evolution of a drug co-arrest network / Natalia Iwanski and Richard Frank
Assessing the core membership of a youth gang from its co-offending network / Martin Bouchard and Richard Konarski
Part 2. Organized crime networks
The embedded and multiplex nature of Al Capone / Andrew V. Papachristos and Chris M. Smith
Snakeheads and the cartwheel network: functional fluidity as opposed to structural flexibility / Sheldon Zhang
Illegal networks or criminal organizations: structure, power, and facilitators in cocaine trafficking structures / Andrea Giménez-Salinas Framis
Dismantling criminal networks: can node attributes play a role? / David A. Bright, Catherine Greenhill, and Natalya Levenkova
Strategic positioning in Mafia networks / Francesco Calderoni
Drug trafficking networks in the world economy / Rémi Boivin
Part 3. Cybercrime networks
Skills and trust: a tour inside the hard drives of computer hackers / Benoit Dupont
Information exchange paths in IRC hacking chat rooms / David Décary-Hétu
Usenet newsgroups, child pornography, and the role of participants / Francis Fortin
Part 4. Economic crime networks
Pushing the Ponzi: the rise and fall of a network fraud / Aili Malm, Andrea Schoepfer, Gisela Bichler, and Neil Boyd
Breakdown of brokerage: crisis and collapse in the Watergate conspiracy / Robert R. Faulkner and Eric Cheney
Part 5. Extremist networks
Terrorist network adaptation to a changing environment / Sean F. Everton and Dan Cunningham
Understanding transnational crime in conflict-affected environments: the democratic republic of the Congo's illicit minerals trading network / Georgia Lysaght.