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EVENT Sep 01
ABSTRACT May 01
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Special Issue - Digital Vigilantism and the Pursuit of Child Sex Offenders: Legal, Ethical, and Social Implications (Call for Papers)

Organization: Criminal Justice Studies
Event: Call for Papers
Categories: Digital Humanities, Interdisciplinary, Popular Culture, Aesthetics, Anthropology/Sociology, Classical Studies, Cultural Studies, Environmental Studies, Film, TV, & Media, Food Studies, History, Philosophy, Miscellaneous
Event Date: 2026-09-01 Abstract Due: 2026-05-01

We are pleased to announce a special issue of Criminal Justice Studies exploring the phenomenon of digital vigilantism in the context of child sex offender detection and exposure. Specifically, this issue will focus on citizen-led efforts to identify, confront, and publicly broadcast alleged child predators through online sting operations and social media platforms. These groups, sometimes referred to as “predator catchers,” blur the lines between justice and spectacle, activism and vigilantism, raising pressing questions about legality, due process, ethics, and the role of informal actors in criminal justice.

This special issue aims to provide a scholarly forum for examining the rise, reach, and ramifications of these practices. We welcome theoretical, empirical, and interdisciplinary work from scholars in criminology, criminal justice, law, digital media studies, sociology, and related disciplines.

Topics of Interest Include (but are not limited to):

  • •The rise and organizational dynamics of citizen-led predator-catching groups
  • Legal and constitutional challenges of digitally mediated sting operations
  • The impact of digital vigilantism on formal law enforcement and prosecution efforts
  • Ethical dilemmas and unintended consequences for victims, offenders, and participants
  • Public perception and media framing of citizen-led predator stings
  • Masculinity, performance, and the branding of justice on digital platforms
  • Comparative analyses of extralegal justice movements across time and space
  • Policy implications and potential pathways for regulation or oversight

Submission Timeline:

  • Full Manuscripts Due: May 1, 2026
  • Peer Review Period: May–August 2026
  • Anticipated Publication: Late 2026

Manuscripts should be submitted through the Criminal Justice Studies online portal and must adhere to the journal’s formatting and style guidelines. https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/gjup20 

Please indicate in your cover letter that the manuscript is intended for the special issue on Digital Vigilantism. For more information about the special issue, please contact the guest editors at the contact information below.

Danielle J.S. Bailey, PhD

University of Texas at Tyler

dbailey@uttyler.edu

 

Jennifer L. Wooldridge, PhD

University of Texas at Tyler

jwooldridge@uttyler.edu

dbailey@uttyler.edu

Danielle Bailey