scholarly journals THE DRUG TRAFFICKING INSERTED IN CYBER SPACE – HOW SOCIAL NETWORKS, VIRTUAL CURRENCIES, BIG DATA AND SOFTWARE APPLICATIONS INFLUENCE IT- AN ANALYSIS OF THE UNITED NATIONS ORGANISATION MEMBERS

Author(s):  
Guilherme Augusto Souza Godoy ◽  
Jardel de Freitas Soares
2015 ◽  
Vol 01 (01) ◽  
pp. 561-573
Author(s):  
Guilherme Augusto Souza Godoy ◽  
Jardel de Freitas Soares

Com o avanço da tecnologia, as gerações y e z estão cada vez mais cedo envolvidas no mundo virtual, onde há ótimas informações a serem extraídas quando sabe-se os caminhos certos para buscá-las, no entanto, a criminalidade está dissipando-se na mesma velocidade do avanço tecnológico. A UNODC[3] age em cooperação com o Grupo Pompidou – Grupo de Cooperação para Combater o Abuso e o Tráfico Ilícito de Drogas do Conselho da Europa. O programa de trabalho 2015/2018 inclui a identificação de oportunidades e desafios para as políticas de drogas provenientes da internet. A legislação penal de diversos países vem alterando-se a fim de tipificar especificamente os cybercrimes, ou tais atos são penalizados por analogia.


Author(s):  
Barbara Jane Holland

Organized crime groups are involved in all kinds of transnational crimes. Lawbreakers can victimize people in other countries through international scams and cyber theft of financial information. Moreover, much of the harm from transnational crimes stems from activities of formal criminal organizations or criminal networks that connect individuals and organizations who undertake specific criminal acts together. According to the United Nations, annual proceeds from transnationally organized crime activities amount to more than $870 billion dollars with drug trafficking producing the largest individual segment of that total amount. One of the most difficult forms of transnational crime to combat is cybercrime. This article will review transnational cybercrime and it's technology.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mirela Danubianu

Sustainable development involves meeting the needs of the current generation without affecting the possibility of future generations to meet their own needs. This implies the correlation of the immediate objectives with the long-term ones at local and global level, considering the economic and environmental aspects in close interdependence. Released around 2010, Big Data is a generic term that refers those data sets whose features make it impossible to process with traditional database tools. Beyond the significant dimensions, Big Data is defined by the so-called set of Big Data Vs: volume, variety, velocity, veracity, volatility and, not least by the value that their analysis adds to the decision-making process. Starting with 2013, the United Nations through the Global Pulse initiative has defined a new concept - Big Data for Development. It aims to find those data sources whose analysis provides valuable information for ensuring the well-being and development of the society. In 2015, the United Nations launched a new agenda that supports 17 sustainable development goals, whose achievement involves integrated actions that will solve social, economic and environmental problems in a way that will reduce disparities. As we are in the middle of the digital revolution, the following question is inevitable: to what extent and in what way can the data collected and analyzed using the latest technologies help to implement policies that will lead to these objectives? This paper aims to provide a qualitative analysis of how Big Data analytics can influence decisions and catalyze the implementation of policies that will result in achieving sustainable development goals.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 28
Author(s):  
Hossein Hassani ◽  
Xu Huang ◽  
Steve MacFeely ◽  
Mohammad Reza Entezarian

The launch of the United Nations (UN) 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015 was a historic event, uniting countries around the world around the shared agenda of sustainable development with a more balanced relationship between human beings and the planet. The SDGs affect or impact almost all aspects of life, as indeed does the technological revolution, empowered by Big Data and their related technologies. It is inevitable that these two significant domains and their integration will play central roles in achieving the 2030 Agenda. This research aims to provide a comprehensive overview of how these domains are currently interacting, by illustrating the impact of Big Data on sustainable development in the context of each of the 17 UN SDGs.


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