This article explores the anatomy of three recent financial scandals and investigates how the legal system has responded to them. Furthermore, it analyses whether behavioural designs can prevent future criminal offenses. The article comes to the conclusion that the social as well as the physical environment can diminish the human propensity to commit a fraud. Moreover, misconduct was often made attractive to fraudsters by means of external rewards. Reforming performance incentives might therefore be an efficient measure to reduce deception in financial markets
Despite substantial regulatory reform following the 2008 financial crisis, financial firms are still...
This paper examines financial crime through the lens of self-control and a criminaloid approach. Som...
__Abstract__ The financial world does not have the best reputation. One of the problems is the pe...
This article explores the anatomy of three recent financial scandals and investigates how the legal ...
The crime of fraud has been underdescribed and undertheorized, both as a wrong and as a legal prohib...
Financial literacy may not be as effective as previously thought in protecting against fraud victimi...
This, the second article in a series, considers whether extending the "failure to prevent" (FTP) mod...
This thesis models rational criminals and regulators with flawed incentives. In it we develop a rati...
This article revisits the Fraud Triangle, an explanatory framework for financial fraud, originally d...
• Trust between customer and provider is implicit in most financial services which contributes towar...
This perspectives article surveys publications in business history and constructs a conceptual frame...
International audienceOperators (fund managers and traders) are regularly involved in fraudulent ope...
The author argues that undesirable behaviour in the financial markets has not been countered by appr...
Finance crime, that is, white-collar crime that occurs in the markets for financial goods and servic...
This article examines the use of shaming and stigma against financial criminals and evidence for and...
Despite substantial regulatory reform following the 2008 financial crisis, financial firms are still...
This paper examines financial crime through the lens of self-control and a criminaloid approach. Som...
__Abstract__ The financial world does not have the best reputation. One of the problems is the pe...
This article explores the anatomy of three recent financial scandals and investigates how the legal ...
The crime of fraud has been underdescribed and undertheorized, both as a wrong and as a legal prohib...
Financial literacy may not be as effective as previously thought in protecting against fraud victimi...
This, the second article in a series, considers whether extending the "failure to prevent" (FTP) mod...
This thesis models rational criminals and regulators with flawed incentives. In it we develop a rati...
This article revisits the Fraud Triangle, an explanatory framework for financial fraud, originally d...
• Trust between customer and provider is implicit in most financial services which contributes towar...
This perspectives article surveys publications in business history and constructs a conceptual frame...
International audienceOperators (fund managers and traders) are regularly involved in fraudulent ope...
The author argues that undesirable behaviour in the financial markets has not been countered by appr...
Finance crime, that is, white-collar crime that occurs in the markets for financial goods and servic...
This article examines the use of shaming and stigma against financial criminals and evidence for and...
Despite substantial regulatory reform following the 2008 financial crisis, financial firms are still...
This paper examines financial crime through the lens of self-control and a criminaloid approach. Som...
__Abstract__ The financial world does not have the best reputation. One of the problems is the pe...