Opportunities for deviant economic exploitation grew significantly in the second half of the twentieth century. Drawing from interviews with forty-seven fraudulent telemarketers, this article describes the backgrounds and pursuits of one type of deviant actor that has stepped forward to exploit these opportunities. The men and women interviewed for this research were reared in middle-class, disproportionately managerial and entrepreneurial families. Their class and family backgrounds provided them with high, but ill-defined, expectations for material success. Their preparation for successful conventional careers was unremarkable. As a result, they were predisposed to economic activities that required few credentials but provided a high inco...
Reprinted through funding provided by PATH, Personal Actions to Health, an initiative of the Kansas ...
Abstract—Nigerian scam is a popular form of fraud in which the fraudster tricks the victim into payi...
Financial literacy may not be as effective as previously thought in protecting against fraud victimi...
Opportunities for deviant economic exploitation grew significantly in the second half of the twentie...
During the past century there have been significant changes in the economic and social structure tha...
New opportunities for crimes of acquisition grew significantly in the second half of the twentieth c...
New opportunities for crimes of acquisition grew significantly in the second half of the twentieth c...
Are capitalists more likely than others to justify ‘immoral’ acts such as bribery ortax evasion? Thi...
This article revisits the Fraud Triangle, an explanatory framework for financial fraud, originally d...
Mass-marketing fraud (MMFs) is a serious, complex and organised crime. The Internet has opened up th...
Romance fraud, where an offender uses the guise of a genuine relationship for monetary gain, affects...
textabstractThis study explored the relationships between diverse social psychological and economic ...
Recruitment fraud uses the guise of a genuine job opportunity to lure potential victims into paying ...
Scambaiters have emerged as a proactive means to targeting fraud offenders. Put simply, scambaiters ...
Scamming-also known as the confidence game, diddling, conning, and swindling-loosely refers to schem...
Reprinted through funding provided by PATH, Personal Actions to Health, an initiative of the Kansas ...
Abstract—Nigerian scam is a popular form of fraud in which the fraudster tricks the victim into payi...
Financial literacy may not be as effective as previously thought in protecting against fraud victimi...
Opportunities for deviant economic exploitation grew significantly in the second half of the twentie...
During the past century there have been significant changes in the economic and social structure tha...
New opportunities for crimes of acquisition grew significantly in the second half of the twentieth c...
New opportunities for crimes of acquisition grew significantly in the second half of the twentieth c...
Are capitalists more likely than others to justify ‘immoral’ acts such as bribery ortax evasion? Thi...
This article revisits the Fraud Triangle, an explanatory framework for financial fraud, originally d...
Mass-marketing fraud (MMFs) is a serious, complex and organised crime. The Internet has opened up th...
Romance fraud, where an offender uses the guise of a genuine relationship for monetary gain, affects...
textabstractThis study explored the relationships between diverse social psychological and economic ...
Recruitment fraud uses the guise of a genuine job opportunity to lure potential victims into paying ...
Scambaiters have emerged as a proactive means to targeting fraud offenders. Put simply, scambaiters ...
Scamming-also known as the confidence game, diddling, conning, and swindling-loosely refers to schem...
Reprinted through funding provided by PATH, Personal Actions to Health, an initiative of the Kansas ...
Abstract—Nigerian scam is a popular form of fraud in which the fraudster tricks the victim into payi...
Financial literacy may not be as effective as previously thought in protecting against fraud victimi...