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This collection focuses on the phenomenon of corruption in (non-)criminal commercial enterprise. It examines the interdependencies between organised crime and corruption in the context of criminal and non-criminal enterprise in domestic and international commerce in a range of OECD countries. The volume adopts a multi-disciplinary and jurisdictionally comparative approach, involving contributions from international academics and practitioners in the fields of law, criminology, sociology and political science.

Produktbeschreibung
This collection focuses on the phenomenon of corruption in (non-)criminal commercial enterprise. It examines the interdependencies between organised crime and corruption in the context of criminal and non-criminal enterprise in domestic and international commerce in a range of OECD countries. The volume adopts a multi-disciplinary and jurisdictionally comparative approach, involving contributions from international academics and practitioners in the fields of law, criminology, sociology and political science.
Autorenporträt
Liz Campbell is Professor of Criminal Law at Durham University. Her research is socio-legal, and currently is focused on responses to corruption, organised and organisational crime; and the presumption of innocence. She is interested in the interfaces between criminal law and regulation and between criminal and legal behaviour, and the politics of criminal law definitions. Her research has been funded by Research Council UK's Partnership for Conflict, Crime and Security; Arts and Humanities Research Council; Law Foundation of New Zealand; Fulbright Commission; Modern Law Review; and Carnegie Trust. Nicholas Lord is a Reader in Criminology at the University of Manchester. Nicholas has research expertise in white-collar, financial and organised crimes, and their regulation and control. He is currently undertaking funded research into the misuse of corporate vehicles in the concealment of illicit finances (PaCCS), the nature and governance of domestic bribery (British Academy), the counterfeit alcohols (Alcohol Research UK), the finances of modern slavery (N8) and to undertake a Global White-Collar Crime Survey (White & Case LLP). His book Regulating Corporate Bribery in International Business (2014, Routledge) was the winner of the British Society of Criminology Book Prize 2015.