Human and AI Driven Branding
Share this content Submit your paper here from 8th July 2026!Introduction The special issue draws upon three strands of literatureThe first explores the evolving interaction between
Share this content Submit your paper here from 8th July 2026!Introduction The special issue draws upon three strands of literatureThe first explores the evolving interaction between
Share this content Submit your paper hereIntroductionThe financial service industry is going through an extraordinary transition due to the development in Artificial Intelligence [AI] and M
Share this content IntroductionAcross contemporary organizations, advances in artificial intelligence (AI) are transforming AI from a discrete technological resource into a systemic organiz
Records Management Journal provides research and contemporary practice on the people, process and systems/technology aspects of managing records and information in organizations.
Share this content IntroductionThis special issue aims to provide a global platform for government officials, practitioners, researchers, academics, professionals, and students to dissemina
Share this content IntroductionThe rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping the way music is created, analyzed, and understood. Music AI has become a focal topic withi
Share this content IntroductionThe widespread deployment of deep neural networks (DNNs) in healthcare, finance, autonomous systems, and generative AI has heightened concerns about security,
International Journal of Building Pathology and Adaptation (IJBPA) is a CIB-encouraged journal that publishes findings on contemporary and original research towards sustaining, maintaining and managing existing buildings.
The Journal of Public Procurement covers all aspects of public procurement at a local, regional, national and international level. Multi-disciplinary, the journal examines public procurement from the perspectives of management, law, economics and politics.
Share this content IntroductionThe increasing pace of industrialization, urban expansion, and resource consumption has placed unprecedented pressure on ecosystems worldwide, pushing environ
Additive Manufacturing: From Fundamental Concepts to Advanced Technologies provides a comprehensive exploration of Additive Manufacturing (AM), bringing together foundational principles with the latest developments shaping the field.
The series offers a balanced blend of theory and practice, addressing key advancements, challenges, and interdisciplinary applications across AM. Real‑world case studies showcase applications and successes across industry sectors, while forward‑looking chapters examine emerging themes such as sustainability, environmental impact, and the growing influence of artificial intelligence. Each volume focuses on a specific theme or application, contributing to a broad, evolving understanding of AM materials, processes, design optimisation, and industrial deployment.
We welcome volumes that include a blend of theoretical and practical perspectives, real-world case studies, and offer in-depth exploration of both fundamental principles and advanced topics.
Scope and Topics of Interest
We invite volumes on topics including, but not limited to:
Format and Authorship
Volumes in the series may take the form of single‑author monographs, co‑authored works or edited collections. The series includes short‑form books of approximately 25,000 - 45,000 words, as well as standard monographs and edited collections of up to 130,000 words.
Contributions may come from:
Intended Readership
Researchers, practitioners, educators, postgraduate students, and professionals working across manufacturing, engineering, materials science, and design.
Series editor
Eujin Pei FIED FHEA CEng CEnv CTPD is an Honorary Professor in Additive Manufacturing, specialising in Design for Additive Manufacturing and use of shape memory materials. An active leader in international standardisation, he serves as Chair of the UK Additive Manufacturing Standards Committee BSI AMT/8 and Convenor of ISO/TC261/WG4 for Additive Manufacturing Data and Design.
How to Submit
For more information, or to discuss possible topics, please contact the Series Editor Eujin Pei: [email protected]
The series is currently calling for full book proposals. Reach out to the series editors or Commissioning Editor for a proposal form.
See our guidance on how to write a proposal
To submit a proposal to this series, please contact the series editors via email:
James Martin
Deakin University, Australia
[email protected]
Meropi Tzanetakis
Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria
[email protected]
Vasileios Karagiannopoulos
University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom
[email protected]
James Martin is an Associate Professor at the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Deakin University, Australia. He is also the leader of the Disrupting Cyber Harms research theme at the Deakin Cyber Research and Innovation Centre. James has long-standing research expertise in cryptomarkets and the online illicit drugs trade, and has also published on cyber-policing and organised crime, ransomware and dark web research ethics. James has also led large-scale research projects examining cybercrime funded by the Australian Institute of Criminology.
Meropi Tzanetakis is a Senior Postdoctoral Researcher in the Institute for Sociology and Social Research at the Vienna University of Economics and Business. She previously served as Assistant Professor in Digital Criminology at the University of Manchester and has held visiting positions at the Universities of Essex, Oslo, and the HIIG in Berlin. Meropi holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of Vienna. Her research explores the socio-technical dynamics of digital drug markets, digital platform business models, and inclusive AI, trust, security, and governance. She is PI of the Austrian Science Fund project ‘A socio-technical framework for online drug markets’. Meropi serves as Series Editor of Emerald Studies in Digital Crime, Technology, and Social Harms, chairs the Working Group on European Drug Policy of the European Society of Criminology, sits on the Editorial Board of Kriminologisches Journal, and is an elected board member of the Economic Sociology Research Network, European Sociological Association.
Vasileios (Vas) Karagiannopoulos is an Associate Professor in Cybercrime and Cybersecurity at the University of Portsmouth’s School of Criminology and Criminal Justice. He serves as the Co-Director of the Centre for Cybercrime and Economic Crime (CCEC) and is also the lead for online harms, cybercrime and AI for the Portsmouth Policing Academic Centre of Excellence. Vasileios is also the Director of the award-winning Cybercrime Awareness Clinic, an innovation hub that provides research-driven cybersecurity advice to businesses, schools, and vulnerable community groups and co-chair of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Ethics Committee. With a multidisciplinary background in law, criminology, cybersecurity and AI, Dr. Karagiannopoulos' research focuses on the intersection of law, technology, politics and security, with specific expertise in hacktivism, cybercrime and cyber-awareness education, and the ethical and risk implications of Artificial Intelligence.
Asia Pacific
Europe
Technology-facilitated offences now arguably constituting the most dynamic and rapidly growing area of contemporary crime. Emerald Studies In Digital Crime Technology And Social Harms engages critically with new trends in technology-facilitated offending and victimisation.
The discipline of criminology has been slow to embrace the critical study of technology-facilitated offences and social harms with most research conducted in this area still informed by a relatively narrow range of cybersecurity and applied criminological perspectives focusing on a limited domain of `traditional´ cybercrimes such as malware hacking and online fraud.
This book series is part of a new movement within criminology and related disciplines to broaden this narrow and outdated focus and engage critically with new trends in technology-facilitated offending and victimisation. This new series does this in two key ways. Firstly by examining a wide range of technology-facilitated offences and harmful social practices ranging from digital surveillance cyber-bullying and image-based sexual abuse through to global darknet drug trading; and secondly by examining these technology-facilitated offences and harmful social practices from a broad range of critical criminological socio-legal and sociological perspectives.
The series includes contemporary feminist and gendered approaches; the role and impact upon victims and perpetrators with a particular emphasis on intersectionality and vulnerable populations such as children and young people members of the LGBTIQ community women indigenous peoples culturally and linguistically diverse communities and the elderly; new methodological innovations particularly qualitative and digital ethnographic approaches; as well as cultural criminological and socio-legal perspectives.
We are passionate about working with researchers globally to deliver a fairer, more inclusive society. This perhaps has never been more important than in today’s divided world.