This research examines the relationships between elements of a business organization and the commission of occupational crimes. This research hypothesizes that the factors identified by existing literature as factors contributing to organizational crime may also contribute to occupational crime. Using the concept of the Fraud Triangle as a framework, five aspects of corporations are identified as areas that may motivate crime, provide opportunity for crime, or allow for the rationalization of criminal actions. This research finds that corporate size, inadequate oversight, organizational goals, organizational morality, and compensation structures may play a role in occupational crime. These five factors are subsequently classified as either ...
Published version of the article. Publishing journal is an Open Access-journal. See http://www.picj...
This comprehensive overview of white collar crime begins by introducing the concept, looking at its ...
This paper identifies as organizational crimes those illegal actions taken in ac-cordance with opera...
This research examines the relationships between elements of a business organization and the commiss...
Using criminology as a foundation, this research explores the personality, psychology, and sociology...
This is the author's final and acceptet version, post refereeing, of the article. Publisher's versio...
White-collar crime has always managed to find its way to corrode the values and ethics that people h...
One challenge for corporate crime scholars has been to distinguish criminal firms from non-criminal ...
This is the author's final and acceptet version of the article, post refereeing. Publisher's version...
A secondary data analysis was conducted to determine relationships between US State, dollar amount o...
White collar crime is the term used to describe financially driven, nonviolent crimes committed by p...
This is the article as published in the journal, due to kind permission of Senate Hall Ltd. www.sena...
White collar crime can cost firms from 2--5% of their sales annually. The magnitude of the loss is s...
Following a period of resurgence in academic interest in the subject over the last 30-40 years, whit...
The commission of wrongs through fraud as well as through force is as old as human society. Although...
Published version of the article. Publishing journal is an Open Access-journal. See http://www.picj...
This comprehensive overview of white collar crime begins by introducing the concept, looking at its ...
This paper identifies as organizational crimes those illegal actions taken in ac-cordance with opera...
This research examines the relationships between elements of a business organization and the commiss...
Using criminology as a foundation, this research explores the personality, psychology, and sociology...
This is the author's final and acceptet version, post refereeing, of the article. Publisher's versio...
White-collar crime has always managed to find its way to corrode the values and ethics that people h...
One challenge for corporate crime scholars has been to distinguish criminal firms from non-criminal ...
This is the author's final and acceptet version of the article, post refereeing. Publisher's version...
A secondary data analysis was conducted to determine relationships between US State, dollar amount o...
White collar crime is the term used to describe financially driven, nonviolent crimes committed by p...
This is the article as published in the journal, due to kind permission of Senate Hall Ltd. www.sena...
White collar crime can cost firms from 2--5% of their sales annually. The magnitude of the loss is s...
Following a period of resurgence in academic interest in the subject over the last 30-40 years, whit...
The commission of wrongs through fraud as well as through force is as old as human society. Although...
Published version of the article. Publishing journal is an Open Access-journal. See http://www.picj...
This comprehensive overview of white collar crime begins by introducing the concept, looking at its ...
This paper identifies as organizational crimes those illegal actions taken in ac-cordance with opera...