This article begins by setting out an analysis of the process of conventionalizing corporate crime that arises from the symbiotic relationship between states and corporations. Noting briefly the empirical characteristics of four broad categories of corporate crime and harm, the article then turns to explore the role of the state in its production and reproduction. We then problematize the role of the state in the reproduction of corporate crime at the level of the global economy, through a discussion of the “crimes of globalization” and “ecocide,” warning of the tendency in the research literature to oversimplify the role of states and of international organizations. The article finishes by arguing that, as critical academics, it is our rol...
The article aims to understand how the dominant conceptualization of transnational crime legitimates...
This paper seeks to develop the principal concerns of the state-corporate crime literature by drawin...
The article aims to understand how the dominant conceptualization of transnational crime legitimates...
This article begins by setting out an analysis of the process of conventionalizing corporate crime t...
This article seeks to tease out the various processes by which states and corporations exist in incr...
The term "state-corporate crime" first appeared in 1990, when Kramer and Michalowski (2006, p 15) de...
The press is awash with accounts of serious cross-border crimes; the responsibility for which is att...
The press is awash with accounts of serious cross-border crimes; the responsibility for which is att...
We live in a time that is dominated by business firms operating across the globe. While globalizatio...
While the image of the state as a victim of organized crime is ubiquitous, the state is rarely seen ...
There are a series of ways, some well recognised, others less so, in which states are complicit in t...
The article studies the problems of the economy globalization, the basis of the origin and a rapid d...
The sheer international variability of crime can make international criminology more interesting and...
Economic globalization is a more complex concept than terms such as 'transnational corporations' and...
Not least in the wake of the financial crises which erupted across many of the most advanced economi...
The article aims to understand how the dominant conceptualization of transnational crime legitimates...
This paper seeks to develop the principal concerns of the state-corporate crime literature by drawin...
The article aims to understand how the dominant conceptualization of transnational crime legitimates...
This article begins by setting out an analysis of the process of conventionalizing corporate crime t...
This article seeks to tease out the various processes by which states and corporations exist in incr...
The term "state-corporate crime" first appeared in 1990, when Kramer and Michalowski (2006, p 15) de...
The press is awash with accounts of serious cross-border crimes; the responsibility for which is att...
The press is awash with accounts of serious cross-border crimes; the responsibility for which is att...
We live in a time that is dominated by business firms operating across the globe. While globalizatio...
While the image of the state as a victim of organized crime is ubiquitous, the state is rarely seen ...
There are a series of ways, some well recognised, others less so, in which states are complicit in t...
The article studies the problems of the economy globalization, the basis of the origin and a rapid d...
The sheer international variability of crime can make international criminology more interesting and...
Economic globalization is a more complex concept than terms such as 'transnational corporations' and...
Not least in the wake of the financial crises which erupted across many of the most advanced economi...
The article aims to understand how the dominant conceptualization of transnational crime legitimates...
This paper seeks to develop the principal concerns of the state-corporate crime literature by drawin...
The article aims to understand how the dominant conceptualization of transnational crime legitimates...