Innovative Research Award

James Edward Hawdon
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, United States

James Edward Hawdon
Affiliation Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Country United States
Scopus ID 7005753038
Documents 131
Citations 2,881
h-index 31
Subject Area Criminology
Event Applied Scientist Awards
ORCID 0000-0002-0273-2227

James Edward Hawdon has established an internationally recognized research portfolio focused on cybercrime, online hate, social solidarity, extremism, violence prevention, and community resilience. The Innovative Research Award recognizes scholarly excellence, interdisciplinary research leadership, and sustained academic contributions within the field of criminology and sociology. His body of work demonstrates extensive interdisciplinary engagement, methodological rigor, and international collaboration across academic institutions and research networks.[1]

Abstract

James Edward Hawdon is an American sociologist and criminologist whose scholarly contributions span cybercrime, online extremism, social cohesion, policing, moral panics, violence prevention, and digital victimization research. His research integrates sociological theory with empirical criminological inquiry and has contributed substantially to understanding the dynamics of online hate, cybervictimization, community responses to violence, and institutional legitimacy in contemporary societies. Hawdon’s interdisciplinary publications, international collaborations, editorial leadership, and research datasets demonstrate a sustained commitment to advancing criminological scholarship and evidence-based social research.[2]

Keywords

Criminology, Cybercrime, Online Hate, Extremism, Sociology, Community Violence, Social Solidarity, Cybervictimization, Violence Prevention, Digital Sociology, Hate Speech, Policing Studies

Introduction

James Edward Hawdon serves as Professor of Sociology at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and has held multiple academic leadership positions, including Director of the Center for Peace Studies and Violence Prevention. His academic interests encompass online hate and cyberviolence, communities and crime, moral panics, and the sociology of substance use. Over several decades, Hawdon has contributed to criminological and sociological scholarship through books, peer-reviewed journal articles, edited volumes, technical reports, datasets, and international collaborative research initiatives.[1]

Research Profile

James Edward Hawdon’s research profile reflects extensive engagement with both theoretical and applied criminology. His publication record includes more than one hundred scholarly works across journals, edited books, datasets, and policy-oriented reports. The Scopus database records 131 indexed documents with 2,881 citations and an h-index of 31, indicating sustained scholarly influence within criminology, sociology, and interdisciplinary social science research.[1]

These themes have remained central throughout his academic career and have contributed to international discussions concerning digital harms and social resilience.[4]

Research Contributions

James Edward Hawdon’s major contributions is the advancement of research on online hate and cyber-extremism. His collaborative studies explored exposure to online hate material across multiple countries, providing comparative insights into cyberhate production, victimization, and intervention strategies.[3]

His studies on social trust, recovery, and collective sentiment have informed sociological understandings of communal resilience and post-trauma social cohesion.[5]

Publications

James Edward Hawdon’s publication portfolio includes books, edited handbooks, peer-reviewed journal articles, technical reports, and internationally distributed datasets. His scholarly work has appeared in journals including American Journal of Criminal Justice, Deviant Behavior, Social Science Computer Review, Computers in Human Behavior, and Violence and Victims.[2]

  • Online Hate and Extremism: Patterns of Production, Exposure, and Interventions in a Cross-National Context (2026)
  • Research Handbook on Hate and Hate Crime in Society (2024)

Research Impact

James Edward Hawdon is reflected through citation metrics, editorial appointments, international research collaborations, and policy-oriented scholarship. His work has influenced academic discourse on cyberhate, online radicalization, cybervictimization, and crisis recovery while also contributing to applied criminology and violence prevention initiatives.[4]

Hawdon’s collaborative studies have frequently incorporated international comparative methodologies involving researchers from Finland, Spain, France, Poland, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[1]

Award Suitability

James Edward Hawdon demonstrates strong suitability for the Innovative Research Award based on his sustained scholarly productivity, interdisciplinary criminological research, international collaborations, and influential contributions to cybercrime and violence prevention studies. His research portfolio reflects methodological diversity, theoretical engagement, and societal relevance, particularly within the domains of online extremism, digital victimization, and social cohesion.[5]

Conclusion

James Edward Hawdon has established a substantial academic record within criminology and sociology through interdisciplinary research addressing cybercrime, online extremism, social solidarity, violence prevention, and institutional legitimacy. His publications, collaborative international projects, and sustained scholarly output have contributed meaningfully to criminological knowledge and public understanding of digital harms and collective behavior. The breadth and influence of his research activities align closely with the objectives of the Innovative Research Award and reflect sustained contributions to contemporary social science scholarship.[3]

References

  1. Hawdon, J. (2026). Online Hate and Extremism: Patterns of Production, Exposure, and Interventions in a Cross-National Context. Emerald Publishing.
    https://doi.org/10.1080/01639625.2025.2456067
  2. Hawdon, J., Costello, M., Reichelmann, A., et al. (2024). “Measuring Hate: Does a Definition Affect Self-Reported Levels of Perpetration and Exposure to Hate in Surveys?” Social Science Computer Review, 42(3), 812–831.
    https://doi.org/10.1177/08944393231211270
  3. Hawdon, J., Parti, K., & Dearden, T. (2020). “Cybercrime in America amid COVID-19: The Initial Results from a Natural Experiment.” American Journal of Criminal Justice, 45(4), 546–562.
    https://doi.org/10.1007/s12103-020-09534-4
  4. Hawdon, J., & Ryan, J. (2011). “Social Relations that Generate and Sustain Solidarity after a Mass Tragedy.” Social Forces, 89(4), 1363–1384.
    https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/89.4.1363
  5. Costello, M., Hawdon, J., Reichelmann, A., et al. (2023). “Defending Others Online: The Influence of Observing Formal and Informal Social Control on One’s Willingness to Defend Cyberhate Victims.” International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(15), 6506.
    https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156506
James Edward Hawdon | Criminology | Innovative Research Award

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