This Article, for a collection in which authors were asked to “imagine a world without corporate criminal liability,” specifies the material questions that should be addressed if debate about the doctrine is to progress past longstanding and oft-repeated assertions. The strongest case for corporate criminal liability is based on the potential for its unique reputational effects to contribute to the prevention and deterrence of crime within corporations. Further research should take up a variety of unanswered questions about those effects having to do with mechanisms and audiences. The relevant inquiries are both theoretical and empirical. Answers will lie in further understanding of organizational and individual behavior more than in famili...
The pervasive influence enjoyed by large, publicly held corporations has inspired a body of scholars...
Corporate criminal liability legislation has been the subject of a widespread debate around the worl...
Crimes perpetrated by large corporate actors are often met with impunity. This is particularly relev...
The United States model of corporate crime control, developed over the last two decades, couples a b...
This Article considers modern systems of criminal justice and the different models of assessing resp...
Corporate criminal liability has become an important and much-talked about topic. This Article argue...
This article examines the common law respondeat superior test for corporate criminal liability and p...
The debate over corporate criminal liability has long involved a fight between proponents who argue ...
In the United States, corporate criminal liability developed in response to the industrial revolutio...
This article defends the controversial existence of criminal liability for corporations by showing h...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
Corporate crime continues to occur at an alarming rate, yet disagreement persists among scholars and...
Although corporate criminal liability has been recognized in the United States for nearly a century,...
The BP oil spill and financial crisis share in common more than just profound tragedy and massive cl...
Why have there been so few prosecutions in the wake of the financial crisis? Official inquiries have...
The pervasive influence enjoyed by large, publicly held corporations has inspired a body of scholars...
Corporate criminal liability legislation has been the subject of a widespread debate around the worl...
Crimes perpetrated by large corporate actors are often met with impunity. This is particularly relev...
The United States model of corporate crime control, developed over the last two decades, couples a b...
This Article considers modern systems of criminal justice and the different models of assessing resp...
Corporate criminal liability has become an important and much-talked about topic. This Article argue...
This article examines the common law respondeat superior test for corporate criminal liability and p...
The debate over corporate criminal liability has long involved a fight between proponents who argue ...
In the United States, corporate criminal liability developed in response to the industrial revolutio...
This article defends the controversial existence of criminal liability for corporations by showing h...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
Corporate crime continues to occur at an alarming rate, yet disagreement persists among scholars and...
Although corporate criminal liability has been recognized in the United States for nearly a century,...
The BP oil spill and financial crisis share in common more than just profound tragedy and massive cl...
Why have there been so few prosecutions in the wake of the financial crisis? Official inquiries have...
The pervasive influence enjoyed by large, publicly held corporations has inspired a body of scholars...
Corporate criminal liability legislation has been the subject of a widespread debate around the worl...
Crimes perpetrated by large corporate actors are often met with impunity. This is particularly relev...