Compliance has long been identified by scholars of white-collar crime as a key strategic control device in the regulation of corporations and complex organisations. Nevertheless, this essential process has been largely ignored within criminology as a specific subject for close scrutiny - Corporate Compliance: Crime, Convenience and Control seeks to address this anomaly. This initiating book applies the theory of convenience to provide criminological insight into the enduring self-regulatory phenomenon of corporate compliance. Convenience theory suggests that compliance is challenged when the corporation has a strong financial motive for illegitimate profits, ample organisational opportunities to commit and conceal wrongdoing, and executive ...
This initiating monograph provides the first thorough examination of the concept of white-collar cri...
In the current global economic and financial scenario, in which corporations are the main protagonis...
Changes in today’s global risk and information society create new challenges for criminal law and cr...
Corporate compliance is becoming increasingly “criminalized.” What began as a means of industry self...
This book aims to bridge the gap between general CEO research, which is traditionally focused on pos...
Reducing and preventing corporate crime and wrongdoing requires more than merely punishing corporati...
This chapter focuses on the relevance that corporate remediation, as fostered by the compliance para...
Crime intentions are an important area of research in criminology. Yet substitutes for real intentio...
Starting out from the idea that deference, rather than deterrence, could foster higher and more effe...
The research literature on the white-collar crime phenomenon has accumulated for several decades. Th...
Corporate compliance in most companies is carried out under the assumption that unethical and illega...
Is criminal law an effective instrument to control corporate crime? Do alternative control instrumen...
Some criminals engage in meticulous planning. Others commit crimes in the heat of the moment. Corpor...
Part I outlines the concept of enforced self-regulation, sketches its theoretical underpinnings, and...
Convenience exists in the financial motive, the organizational opportunity, and the personal willing...
This initiating monograph provides the first thorough examination of the concept of white-collar cri...
In the current global economic and financial scenario, in which corporations are the main protagonis...
Changes in today’s global risk and information society create new challenges for criminal law and cr...
Corporate compliance is becoming increasingly “criminalized.” What began as a means of industry self...
This book aims to bridge the gap between general CEO research, which is traditionally focused on pos...
Reducing and preventing corporate crime and wrongdoing requires more than merely punishing corporati...
This chapter focuses on the relevance that corporate remediation, as fostered by the compliance para...
Crime intentions are an important area of research in criminology. Yet substitutes for real intentio...
Starting out from the idea that deference, rather than deterrence, could foster higher and more effe...
The research literature on the white-collar crime phenomenon has accumulated for several decades. Th...
Corporate compliance in most companies is carried out under the assumption that unethical and illega...
Is criminal law an effective instrument to control corporate crime? Do alternative control instrumen...
Some criminals engage in meticulous planning. Others commit crimes in the heat of the moment. Corpor...
Part I outlines the concept of enforced self-regulation, sketches its theoretical underpinnings, and...
Convenience exists in the financial motive, the organizational opportunity, and the personal willing...
This initiating monograph provides the first thorough examination of the concept of white-collar cri...
In the current global economic and financial scenario, in which corporations are the main protagonis...
Changes in today’s global risk and information society create new challenges for criminal law and cr...