This study explores the new trends, driving factors and governance challenges to cybercrime in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). This research employed a mixed-methods design, incorporating a survey, interviews, and a literature review. The results indicate that the cyber security situation is advanced and dynamic, with the extensive deployment of phishing, viruses, and personal imitation on social media, as well as practices targeting small firms, learning institutions, and the general population. Many of the survey participants attested that they had experience of ICT-related crimes, showing an increased exposure to cyber threats in industries. The research also points to the high relationship between unemployment among young people and their involvement in cybercrime. The regulatory issues are still a problem, as the majority of the participants view national systems against cybercrime as ineffective. These observations are supported by the interview information that highlights the following issues as common obstacles to cyber security: infrastructural gaps, inadequate regional co-operation, and insufficient institutional capability. Considering these results, the study recommends a multi-layered policy-technology framework that includes legal reform, technology innovation, collaboration between the government and the business, and residents’ awareness to build cyber resilience in the region. The study makes a strong case for a concerted legal framework, cross-border collaboration, and digitally inclusive policies that can help in alleviating cyber risks and bringing security to the digital destiny of SSA.
Egho-Promise et al. (Fri,) studied this question.