Introduction - John Minkes and Leonard Minkes Corporations and Health and Safety - Steve Tombs Corporate Economic Crimes - Laureen Snider The Evolving Legal Test of Corporate Criminal Liability - James Gobert The Foundations of Business Ethics - Robert Elliott Allinson The Organization Did It: Individuals, Corporations and Crime - Maurice Punch Organizational Decision Making: Economic and Managerial Considerations - Brian J. Loasby Crime and Culture: Corporate Crime and Criminal Justice in a Different Cultural Environment - Omi Hatashin Rethinking Occupational Deviance and Crime in the Light of Globalization - Gerald Mars Getting Beyond the Moral Drama of Crime: What We Learn From Studying White Collar Criminal Careers - David Weisburd, Elin Waring and Nicole Leeper Piquero
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"This is an innovative and multidisciplinary analysis of corporate and white collar crime that is both theoretically and empirically rich. The text serves as a poignant reminder why research involving the powerful must be a central part of criminological inquiry and why this book is essential reading." Professor Reece Walters, The Open University "This timely collection contains contemporary case studies and critical analyses by leading writers in the study of white collar corporate crime. It makes an invaluable contribution to the 'criminology of the corporation'." Professor Hazel Croall, Glasgow Caledonian University "Again and again, pension funds are pillaged, investors fleeced, commuters killed, workers maimed, and communities poisoned. Why is it that so few of these acts are defined as crimes, and why is it that, even when they are, prosecution is so rarely effective? Corporate Crime and White Collar Crime addresses these very questions through its rigorous, well-developed analysis and its wide ranging empirical focus - on Europe, North America, Asia and beyond. The book can help all of us to re-examine our understanding of the nature of crime and of criminals, and to reassess the costs as well as the benefits of our current economic, political and social order." Professor Frank Pearce, Queen's University, Canada