Reducing and preventing corporate crime and wrongdoing requires more than merely punishing corporations and their executives. True change requires transformations within corporations. This chapter discusses three options to induce corporate transformations: corporate compliance management mechanisms, whistleblower protection rules, and independent internal monitoring. The chapter finds that the existing empirical evidence sheds doubt on whether these systems can effectively reduce corporate crime and wrongdoing. It concludes that, based on existing studies, these systems are more likely to be effective exactly where they are least needed, namely when the corporate leadership is already committed to compliance, when there is already successf...
Corporate compliance in most companies is carried out under the assumption that unethical and illega...
In recent years, federal and state laws have sought to promote good corporate citizenship by encoura...
Whether it is a financial institution like Wells Fargo, an automotive company like General Motors, a...
Corporate compliance is becoming increasingly “criminalized.” What began as a means of industry self...
Compliance programs entail monitoring of employees’ behavior with the claimed objective of fighting ...
Justin S. Brooks\u27 article discusses the effectiveness of corporate compliance programs and factor...
Over the past few decades, as corporate criminal liability rules, sentencing guidelines, and settlem...
Over the past few decades, as corporate criminal liability rules, sentencing guidelines, and settlem...
Compliance has long been identified by scholars of white-collar crime as a key strategic control dev...
As the number of government investigations in the corporate and public sectors increases worldwide, ...
Corporate criminal liability legislation has been the subject of a widespread debate around the worl...
This chapter focuses on the relevance that corporate remediation, as fostered by the compliance para...
Legislation addressing corporate criminal liability has been the subject of worldwide debate ever si...
How can we ensure corporations play by the “rules of the game” – that is, laws encouraging firms to ...
Starting out from the idea that deference, rather than deterrence, could foster higher and more effe...
Corporate compliance in most companies is carried out under the assumption that unethical and illega...
In recent years, federal and state laws have sought to promote good corporate citizenship by encoura...
Whether it is a financial institution like Wells Fargo, an automotive company like General Motors, a...
Corporate compliance is becoming increasingly “criminalized.” What began as a means of industry self...
Compliance programs entail monitoring of employees’ behavior with the claimed objective of fighting ...
Justin S. Brooks\u27 article discusses the effectiveness of corporate compliance programs and factor...
Over the past few decades, as corporate criminal liability rules, sentencing guidelines, and settlem...
Over the past few decades, as corporate criminal liability rules, sentencing guidelines, and settlem...
Compliance has long been identified by scholars of white-collar crime as a key strategic control dev...
As the number of government investigations in the corporate and public sectors increases worldwide, ...
Corporate criminal liability legislation has been the subject of a widespread debate around the worl...
This chapter focuses on the relevance that corporate remediation, as fostered by the compliance para...
Legislation addressing corporate criminal liability has been the subject of worldwide debate ever si...
How can we ensure corporations play by the “rules of the game” – that is, laws encouraging firms to ...
Starting out from the idea that deference, rather than deterrence, could foster higher and more effe...
Corporate compliance in most companies is carried out under the assumption that unethical and illega...
In recent years, federal and state laws have sought to promote good corporate citizenship by encoura...
Whether it is a financial institution like Wells Fargo, an automotive company like General Motors, a...