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Cybercriminals (Yahoo Boys) and Society : Hustle Kingdoms, Occult Economies, and the Colonial Politics of Digital Fraud

Cybercriminals (Yahoo Boys) and Society : Hustle Kingdoms, Occult Economies, and the Colonial Politics of Digital Fraud

by Taylor & Francis Ltd

£41.99
MPN9781032947631
Prices updated 21 May 2026

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This book offers a comprehensive sociological account of cyber-enabled fraud in Africa south of the Sahara, centred on Nigeria but extending across Ghana, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Jamaica, and Southeast Asia.Drawing on over a decade of ethnographic research, conviction case files, court documents, interviews, and cultural analysis of Afrobeats music, it examines online fraud not as isolated wrongdoing but as a patterned social response to postcolonial inequality, blocked mobility, and institutional failure. The book introduces the Tripartite Cybercrime Framework, a motivation-centred typology that classifies cybercrime as socio-economic, psychosocial, or geopolitical, shifting attention from technical mechanisms to underlying purpose.It also develops the concept of Hustle Kingdoms, underground fraud "academies" that mimic schooling while binding learners through spiritual oaths, psychological pressure, and economic dependency, complicating simple victim–offender binaries.Across comparative chapters, the book connects cultural repertoires of online fraud in Africa south of the Sahara to Southeast Asian scam compounds and argues that coercion should be understood as a spectrum, from overt confinement to socially embedded and spiritually enforced control.It concludes with clear policy and safeguarding implications for prevention, policing, sentencing, and victim support. This book will be of interest to criminologists and sociologists studying cybercrime, fraud and financial crime, and informal economies.It will also be useful reading for scholars of cultural studies, social psychology, and African studies.It will also be valuable for policymakers and practitioners working on cybercrime prevention.

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