G., Kamallini (2025) The Evolving Role of International Conventions in Regulating Cyberspace and Combating Cybercrime. International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology, 10 (9): 25sep1436. pp. 2623-2627. ISSN 2456-2165
International conventions are the backbone of our global effort to make cyberspace safer. The internet connects us all, but it also creates avenues for cybercrime, from fraud and hacking to more insidious threats like child exploitation and the spread of harmful misinformation. International conventions play a critical yet complex role in the evolving regulation of cyberspace. Facing a borderless and rapidly advancing digital domain, these agreements strive to establish common legal frameworks, foster international cooperation, and address transnational cyber threats. A foundational paradigm for many states, treaties such as the Council of Europe's Budapest Convention on Cybercrime have greatly standardized national cybercrime legislation and enabled reciprocal legal aid. The UN Convention against Cybercrime, that was recently adopted, represents an international attempt to create a more thorough and widely recognized framework that would close current loopholes and improve the exchange of evidence across borders. The ever-changing nature of cyber technology, conflicting national interests regarding sovereignty and data governance, the difficulty of attribution of cyberattacks, and the substantial involvement of non-state actors all pose challenges to the efficacy of these conventions. While these instruments provide essential norms for responsible state behavior, promote capacity building, and criminalize a range of malicious cyber activities, their implementation often faces hurdles such as slow ratification, broad definitions, and the need to balance security imperatives with human rights protections. Ultimately, international conventions serve as crucial, albeit imperfect, mechanisms for building consensus and legal predictability in a domain that defies traditional geographical and legal boundaries. To sum it up in simpler words it is the shared rulebooks nations create to tackle online threats that transcending the borders.
Altmetric Metrics
Dimensions Matrics
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year
![]() |

