Criminality New Script May 2026

Criminality’s New Script: From Alleyway to Algorithm

Actor-Network Theory (Latour, 2005) becomes criminologically useful. Non-human actors (algorithms, smart contracts, blockchain validators) are actants that shape criminal outcomes. A poorly coded smart contract is not just a tool; it is a co-producer of the crime. Criminality New Script

Criminologists have a choice: continue analyzing the old script as if it were the only one, or learn the new grammar of harm. This paper has argued for the latter. The new script does not replace the old—physical crimes still occur—but it increasingly dominates high-impact, high-volume, and transnational offending. If we fail to understand the script, we cede the stage to those who write it best: the offenders. Criminologists have a choice: continue analyzing the old

Routine activity theory (Cohen & Felson, 1979) must be re-specified. The “suitable target” is no longer just a person or property; it is a vulnerable API, a weak password hash, or an unpatched firmware . The “capable guardian” is not just a police officer or a neighbor; it is a firewall, an intrusion detection system, or a platform’s content moderation algorithm . The “motivated offender” may be a bot, a state-sponsored hacker, or a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) of pseudonymous actors. If we fail to understand the script, we