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    An investigation of digital forensic concepts in an international environment: the U.S., South Africa, and Namibia

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    Author
    Phillips, Amelia
    Chair
    Nance, Kara
    Committee
    Bhatt, Uma
    Hay, Brian
    Genetti, Jon
    Blurton, David
    Metadata
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    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/11122/4615
    Abstract
    Digital forensic investigations are growing in number not only in the United States but in nations around the world. The activities of multinational corporations and cybercrime cross jurisdictional boundaries on a daily basis. This investigation sets out to perform a qualitative analysis of the requirements needed for acceptance of digital evidence in multiple jurisdictions and the qualifications of digital forensic examiners by focusing on three case studies. The countries chosen are the United States, South Africa and Namibia. The research lays the foundation by examining existing international laws and treaties, and then uses the three case studies to address constitutional issues, civil and criminal law as they pertain to digital evidence. By ascertaining where the similarities and differences lie, a grounded theory approach is used to provide digital forensic examiners, legal staff and investigators a basis that can be used to approach digital cases that come from or must be presented in foreign jurisdictions. As more countries struggle to establish their digital laws regarding investigations, the resulting approach will serve as a guide and reference.
    Description
    Dissertation (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2013
    Date
    2013-08
    Type
    Dissertation
    Collections
    Computer Science

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