Follow
Rebecca Nash
Rebecca Nash
Associate Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice, California State University, Long Beach
Verified email at csulb.edu
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Investing in people: The role of social networks in the diffusion of a large-scale fraud
R Nash, M Bouchard, A Malm
Social networks 35 (4), 686-698, 2013
722013
Co-offending between criminal enterprise groups
A Malm, G Bichler, R Nash
Global Crime 12 (2), 112-128, 2011
722011
Researching terrorism and counter-terrorism through a network lens
M Bouchard, R Nash
Social Networks, Terrorism and Counter-terrorism, 48-60, 2015
212015
Social network analysis and terrorism
A Malm, R Nash, R Moghadam
The handbook of the criminology of terrorism, 221-231, 2016
202016
Social networks as predictors of the harm suffered by victims of a large-scale Ponzi scheme
R Nash, M Bouchard, A Malm
Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice 59 (1), 26-62, 2017
192017
Co-offending networks in cannabis cultivation
A Malm, R Nash, S Vickovic
World Wide Weed, 127-143, 2016
172016
Travel broadens the network: Turning points in the network trajectory of an American Jihadi
R Nash, M Bouchard
Social Networks, Terrorism and Counter-terrorism, 61-81, 2015
132015
Twisting trust: social networks, due diligence, and loss of capital in a Ponzi scheme
R Nash, M Bouchard, A Malm
Crime, Law and Social Change 69, 67-89, 2018
122018
Deviant peer preferences: A simplified approach to account for peer selection effects
O Gallupe, JH Boman IV, R Nash, ED Castro
Deviant behavior 41 (9), 1143-1156, 2020
92020
Trusting the con man: The role of social networks in the diffusion of fraud
RM Nash
Simon Fraser University, 2013
22013
Researching terrorism and counter-terrorism through a network lens: Researching terrorism and counterterrorism through a network lens
M Bouchard, R Nash
desLibris, 2015
2015
The system can't perform the operation now. Try again later.
Articles 1–11