In 2001, Enron Corporation (Enron) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection due to accounting irregularities. At the core of the failure was a corporate culture that held in contempt regulatory oversight, financial disclosure and the governance process. This paper applies a 12-step model of white-collar crime (McKay et al., 2010) to the case of Enron. The analysis is based on an interview with Sherron Watkins, whistleblower and former employee of Enron, as well as other coverage of the Enron collapse. This paper presents the value of the model as applied to a single organisation and makes recommendations based on the application
This report briefly examines the accounting system that failed to provide a clear picture of the fir...
This project analyzes the behavioral aspects of Enron employees, Enron's accounting treatments and t...
This Article presents the alternative view that the Sarbanes-Oxley Act’s criminal provisions make si...
The Enron scandal, revealed in October 2001, eventually led to the bankruptcy of the Enron Corporati...
The corporate collapses of recent times, culminating with massive collapses such as those of Enron i...
What was the social architecture of the infamous Enron corporate scandal? The purpose of this presen...
This paper examines the psychopathology of the white-collar criminal acting as a corporate leader. I...
Enron Corporation was an American energy, commodities, and ser-vices company based in Houston, Texas...
The Enron collapse has many facets. It is particularly rich in financial reporting and disclosure is...
The Enron debacle is one of the cases of corporate economic fraud that hit the US, and indeed the wo...
Abstract: The year 2011 has marked a decade since the Enron collapse, considered the most emblemati...
Abstract The financial collapse of Enron Corporation in 2002 has shaken the public confidence in th...
This case documents the evolution of ‘fraud culture’ at Enron Corporation and vividly explicates the...
This case documents the evolution of ‘fraud culture’ at Enron Corporation and vividly explicates th...
The full-text article is available to subscribers online via the WestLaw database. Copyright: Thomso...
This report briefly examines the accounting system that failed to provide a clear picture of the fir...
This project analyzes the behavioral aspects of Enron employees, Enron's accounting treatments and t...
This Article presents the alternative view that the Sarbanes-Oxley Act’s criminal provisions make si...
The Enron scandal, revealed in October 2001, eventually led to the bankruptcy of the Enron Corporati...
The corporate collapses of recent times, culminating with massive collapses such as those of Enron i...
What was the social architecture of the infamous Enron corporate scandal? The purpose of this presen...
This paper examines the psychopathology of the white-collar criminal acting as a corporate leader. I...
Enron Corporation was an American energy, commodities, and ser-vices company based in Houston, Texas...
The Enron collapse has many facets. It is particularly rich in financial reporting and disclosure is...
The Enron debacle is one of the cases of corporate economic fraud that hit the US, and indeed the wo...
Abstract: The year 2011 has marked a decade since the Enron collapse, considered the most emblemati...
Abstract The financial collapse of Enron Corporation in 2002 has shaken the public confidence in th...
This case documents the evolution of ‘fraud culture’ at Enron Corporation and vividly explicates the...
This case documents the evolution of ‘fraud culture’ at Enron Corporation and vividly explicates th...
The full-text article is available to subscribers online via the WestLaw database. Copyright: Thomso...
This report briefly examines the accounting system that failed to provide a clear picture of the fir...
This project analyzes the behavioral aspects of Enron employees, Enron's accounting treatments and t...
This Article presents the alternative view that the Sarbanes-Oxley Act’s criminal provisions make si...