The Oxford Handbook of White-Collar Crime
Herausgeber: Slyke, Shanna van; Cullen, Francis T; Benson, Michael L
The Oxford Handbook of White-Collar Crime
Herausgeber: Slyke, Shanna van; Cullen, Francis T; Benson, Michael L
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The Oxford Handbook of White-Collar Crime offers a comprehensive treatment of the most up-to-date theories and research regarding white-collar crime. Contributors tackle a vast range of topics, including the impact of white-collar crime, the contexts in which white-collar crime occurs, current crime policies and debates, and examinations of the criminals themselves. The volume concludes with a set of essays that discuss potential responses for controllingwhite-collar crime, as well as promising new avenues for future research.
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The Oxford Handbook of White-Collar Crime offers a comprehensive treatment of the most up-to-date theories and research regarding white-collar crime. Contributors tackle a vast range of topics, including the impact of white-collar crime, the contexts in which white-collar crime occurs, current crime policies and debates, and examinations of the criminals themselves. The volume concludes with a set of essays that discuss potential responses for controllingwhite-collar crime, as well as promising new avenues for future research.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
- Seitenzahl: 740
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 171mm x 45mm
- Gewicht: 1274g
- ISBN-13: 9780190947347
- ISBN-10: 0190947349
- Artikelnr.: 54797898
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
- Seitenzahl: 740
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 171mm x 45mm
- Gewicht: 1274g
- ISBN-13: 9780190947347
- ISBN-10: 0190947349
- Artikelnr.: 54797898
Shanna R. Van Slyke is Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice in the Department of Economic Crime and Justice Studies at Utica College, NY. Michael L. Benson is Professor in the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Cincinnati. Francis T. Cullen is Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus and Senior Research Associate in the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Cincinnati.
* 1. Core Themes in the Study of White-Collar Crime
* Michael L. Benson, Shanna R. Van Slyke, and Francis T. Cullen
* PART I: DEFINITIONAL DEBATES
* 2. The Roots and Variant Definitions of the Concept of "White-Collar
Crime"
* Gilbert Geis
* 3. Theoretical, Empirical, and Policy Implications of Alternative
Definitions of "White-Collar
* Crime"
* Henry N. Pontell
* PART II: IMPACT OF WHITE-COLLAR CRIME
* 4. What Is Known and What Should Be Known about White-Collar Crime
Victimization?
* Hazel Croall
* 5. The Costs of White-Collar Crime
* Mark A. Cohen
* PART III: UNDERSTANDING WHITE-COLLAR CRIMINALS
* 6. Who Commits White-Collar Crime, and What Do We Know about Them?
* Paul M. Klenowski and Kimberly D. Dodson
* 7. White-Collar Criminals: Ethnographic Portraits of Their Identities
and Decision Making
* Dean A. Dabney
* 8. The Pool of Potential White-Collar Criminals: From Whence?
* Andy Hochstetler and William Mackey
* 9. Middle-Class Crime: Moral Economies between Crime in the Streets
and Crime in the Suites
* Susanne Karstedt
* 10. Gender Constructions
* Mary Dodge
* PART IV: WHITE-COLLAR CRIME ACROSS THE LIFE COURSE
* 11. Adolescent Precursors of White-Collar Crime
* Simon I. Singer
* 12. White-Collar Criminal Participation and the Life Course
* Nicole Leeper Piquero and Alex R. Piquero
* 13. Developmental Perspectives on White-Collar Criminality
* Michael L. Benson
* PART V: CULTURAL AND INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXTS
* 14. White-Collar Crimes of the Financial Crisis
* Spencer Headworth and John L. Hagan
* 15. Political Economy and White-Collar Crime
* Harland Prechel
* 16. Economic Fluctuations and Crises
* Sally S. Simpson and Melissa Rorie
* 17. Cultural Variation
* Susyan Jou, Bill Hebenton, and Lennon Y. C. Chang
* PART VI: ORGANIZATIONAL CONTEXT
* 18. Criminal Decision Making in Organizational Contexts
* Edward C. Tomlinson and Amanda Pozzuto
* 19. Opportunities for White-Collar Crime
* Tamara D. Madensen
* 20. Employee Theft
* Jay P. Kennedy
* 21. Criminogenic Organizational Properties and Dynamics
* Wim Huisman
* 22. Organizational Self-Restraint
* Stelios C. Zyglidopoulos and Peter Fleming
* PART VII: REGULATORY OVERSIGHT
* 23. Oversight and Rule Making as Political Conflict
* Mary Kreiner Ramirez
* 24. Regulation: From Traditional to Cooperative
* Neil Gunningham
* 25. Comparing Assumptions Underlying Regulatory Inspection
Strategies: Implications for Oversight Policy
* Peter Mascini
* 26. The Credibility of Oversight and Aggregate Rates of White-Collar
Crime
* Wei Wang and Hongming Cheng
* PART VIII: CRIMINAL SANCTIONS
* 27. Investigating and Prosecuting White-Collar Criminals
* Lucian E. Dervan and Ellen S. Podgor
* 28. Sentencing Respectable Offenders
* Michael Levi
* 29. Effects on White-Collar Defendants of Criminal Justice Attention
and Sanctions
* Brian K. Payne
* 30. White-Collar Crime and Perceptual Deterrence
* Ray Paternoster and Stephen G. Tibbetts
* PART IX: PUBLIC POLICY
* 31. The Practical Challenges of Responding to Corporate Crime
* Peter Cleary Yeager
* 32. Public Opinion and Public Policy on White-Collar Crime
* Shanna R. Van Slyke and Donald J. Rebovich
* Michael L. Benson, Shanna R. Van Slyke, and Francis T. Cullen
* PART I: DEFINITIONAL DEBATES
* 2. The Roots and Variant Definitions of the Concept of "White-Collar
Crime"
* Gilbert Geis
* 3. Theoretical, Empirical, and Policy Implications of Alternative
Definitions of "White-Collar
* Crime"
* Henry N. Pontell
* PART II: IMPACT OF WHITE-COLLAR CRIME
* 4. What Is Known and What Should Be Known about White-Collar Crime
Victimization?
* Hazel Croall
* 5. The Costs of White-Collar Crime
* Mark A. Cohen
* PART III: UNDERSTANDING WHITE-COLLAR CRIMINALS
* 6. Who Commits White-Collar Crime, and What Do We Know about Them?
* Paul M. Klenowski and Kimberly D. Dodson
* 7. White-Collar Criminals: Ethnographic Portraits of Their Identities
and Decision Making
* Dean A. Dabney
* 8. The Pool of Potential White-Collar Criminals: From Whence?
* Andy Hochstetler and William Mackey
* 9. Middle-Class Crime: Moral Economies between Crime in the Streets
and Crime in the Suites
* Susanne Karstedt
* 10. Gender Constructions
* Mary Dodge
* PART IV: WHITE-COLLAR CRIME ACROSS THE LIFE COURSE
* 11. Adolescent Precursors of White-Collar Crime
* Simon I. Singer
* 12. White-Collar Criminal Participation and the Life Course
* Nicole Leeper Piquero and Alex R. Piquero
* 13. Developmental Perspectives on White-Collar Criminality
* Michael L. Benson
* PART V: CULTURAL AND INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXTS
* 14. White-Collar Crimes of the Financial Crisis
* Spencer Headworth and John L. Hagan
* 15. Political Economy and White-Collar Crime
* Harland Prechel
* 16. Economic Fluctuations and Crises
* Sally S. Simpson and Melissa Rorie
* 17. Cultural Variation
* Susyan Jou, Bill Hebenton, and Lennon Y. C. Chang
* PART VI: ORGANIZATIONAL CONTEXT
* 18. Criminal Decision Making in Organizational Contexts
* Edward C. Tomlinson and Amanda Pozzuto
* 19. Opportunities for White-Collar Crime
* Tamara D. Madensen
* 20. Employee Theft
* Jay P. Kennedy
* 21. Criminogenic Organizational Properties and Dynamics
* Wim Huisman
* 22. Organizational Self-Restraint
* Stelios C. Zyglidopoulos and Peter Fleming
* PART VII: REGULATORY OVERSIGHT
* 23. Oversight and Rule Making as Political Conflict
* Mary Kreiner Ramirez
* 24. Regulation: From Traditional to Cooperative
* Neil Gunningham
* 25. Comparing Assumptions Underlying Regulatory Inspection
Strategies: Implications for Oversight Policy
* Peter Mascini
* 26. The Credibility of Oversight and Aggregate Rates of White-Collar
Crime
* Wei Wang and Hongming Cheng
* PART VIII: CRIMINAL SANCTIONS
* 27. Investigating and Prosecuting White-Collar Criminals
* Lucian E. Dervan and Ellen S. Podgor
* 28. Sentencing Respectable Offenders
* Michael Levi
* 29. Effects on White-Collar Defendants of Criminal Justice Attention
and Sanctions
* Brian K. Payne
* 30. White-Collar Crime and Perceptual Deterrence
* Ray Paternoster and Stephen G. Tibbetts
* PART IX: PUBLIC POLICY
* 31. The Practical Challenges of Responding to Corporate Crime
* Peter Cleary Yeager
* 32. Public Opinion and Public Policy on White-Collar Crime
* Shanna R. Van Slyke and Donald J. Rebovich
* 1. Core Themes in the Study of White-Collar Crime
* Michael L. Benson, Shanna R. Van Slyke, and Francis T. Cullen
* PART I: DEFINITIONAL DEBATES
* 2. The Roots and Variant Definitions of the Concept of "White-Collar
Crime"
* Gilbert Geis
* 3. Theoretical, Empirical, and Policy Implications of Alternative
Definitions of "White-Collar
* Crime"
* Henry N. Pontell
* PART II: IMPACT OF WHITE-COLLAR CRIME
* 4. What Is Known and What Should Be Known about White-Collar Crime
Victimization?
* Hazel Croall
* 5. The Costs of White-Collar Crime
* Mark A. Cohen
* PART III: UNDERSTANDING WHITE-COLLAR CRIMINALS
* 6. Who Commits White-Collar Crime, and What Do We Know about Them?
* Paul M. Klenowski and Kimberly D. Dodson
* 7. White-Collar Criminals: Ethnographic Portraits of Their Identities
and Decision Making
* Dean A. Dabney
* 8. The Pool of Potential White-Collar Criminals: From Whence?
* Andy Hochstetler and William Mackey
* 9. Middle-Class Crime: Moral Economies between Crime in the Streets
and Crime in the Suites
* Susanne Karstedt
* 10. Gender Constructions
* Mary Dodge
* PART IV: WHITE-COLLAR CRIME ACROSS THE LIFE COURSE
* 11. Adolescent Precursors of White-Collar Crime
* Simon I. Singer
* 12. White-Collar Criminal Participation and the Life Course
* Nicole Leeper Piquero and Alex R. Piquero
* 13. Developmental Perspectives on White-Collar Criminality
* Michael L. Benson
* PART V: CULTURAL AND INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXTS
* 14. White-Collar Crimes of the Financial Crisis
* Spencer Headworth and John L. Hagan
* 15. Political Economy and White-Collar Crime
* Harland Prechel
* 16. Economic Fluctuations and Crises
* Sally S. Simpson and Melissa Rorie
* 17. Cultural Variation
* Susyan Jou, Bill Hebenton, and Lennon Y. C. Chang
* PART VI: ORGANIZATIONAL CONTEXT
* 18. Criminal Decision Making in Organizational Contexts
* Edward C. Tomlinson and Amanda Pozzuto
* 19. Opportunities for White-Collar Crime
* Tamara D. Madensen
* 20. Employee Theft
* Jay P. Kennedy
* 21. Criminogenic Organizational Properties and Dynamics
* Wim Huisman
* 22. Organizational Self-Restraint
* Stelios C. Zyglidopoulos and Peter Fleming
* PART VII: REGULATORY OVERSIGHT
* 23. Oversight and Rule Making as Political Conflict
* Mary Kreiner Ramirez
* 24. Regulation: From Traditional to Cooperative
* Neil Gunningham
* 25. Comparing Assumptions Underlying Regulatory Inspection
Strategies: Implications for Oversight Policy
* Peter Mascini
* 26. The Credibility of Oversight and Aggregate Rates of White-Collar
Crime
* Wei Wang and Hongming Cheng
* PART VIII: CRIMINAL SANCTIONS
* 27. Investigating and Prosecuting White-Collar Criminals
* Lucian E. Dervan and Ellen S. Podgor
* 28. Sentencing Respectable Offenders
* Michael Levi
* 29. Effects on White-Collar Defendants of Criminal Justice Attention
and Sanctions
* Brian K. Payne
* 30. White-Collar Crime and Perceptual Deterrence
* Ray Paternoster and Stephen G. Tibbetts
* PART IX: PUBLIC POLICY
* 31. The Practical Challenges of Responding to Corporate Crime
* Peter Cleary Yeager
* 32. Public Opinion and Public Policy on White-Collar Crime
* Shanna R. Van Slyke and Donald J. Rebovich
* Michael L. Benson, Shanna R. Van Slyke, and Francis T. Cullen
* PART I: DEFINITIONAL DEBATES
* 2. The Roots and Variant Definitions of the Concept of "White-Collar
Crime"
* Gilbert Geis
* 3. Theoretical, Empirical, and Policy Implications of Alternative
Definitions of "White-Collar
* Crime"
* Henry N. Pontell
* PART II: IMPACT OF WHITE-COLLAR CRIME
* 4. What Is Known and What Should Be Known about White-Collar Crime
Victimization?
* Hazel Croall
* 5. The Costs of White-Collar Crime
* Mark A. Cohen
* PART III: UNDERSTANDING WHITE-COLLAR CRIMINALS
* 6. Who Commits White-Collar Crime, and What Do We Know about Them?
* Paul M. Klenowski and Kimberly D. Dodson
* 7. White-Collar Criminals: Ethnographic Portraits of Their Identities
and Decision Making
* Dean A. Dabney
* 8. The Pool of Potential White-Collar Criminals: From Whence?
* Andy Hochstetler and William Mackey
* 9. Middle-Class Crime: Moral Economies between Crime in the Streets
and Crime in the Suites
* Susanne Karstedt
* 10. Gender Constructions
* Mary Dodge
* PART IV: WHITE-COLLAR CRIME ACROSS THE LIFE COURSE
* 11. Adolescent Precursors of White-Collar Crime
* Simon I. Singer
* 12. White-Collar Criminal Participation and the Life Course
* Nicole Leeper Piquero and Alex R. Piquero
* 13. Developmental Perspectives on White-Collar Criminality
* Michael L. Benson
* PART V: CULTURAL AND INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXTS
* 14. White-Collar Crimes of the Financial Crisis
* Spencer Headworth and John L. Hagan
* 15. Political Economy and White-Collar Crime
* Harland Prechel
* 16. Economic Fluctuations and Crises
* Sally S. Simpson and Melissa Rorie
* 17. Cultural Variation
* Susyan Jou, Bill Hebenton, and Lennon Y. C. Chang
* PART VI: ORGANIZATIONAL CONTEXT
* 18. Criminal Decision Making in Organizational Contexts
* Edward C. Tomlinson and Amanda Pozzuto
* 19. Opportunities for White-Collar Crime
* Tamara D. Madensen
* 20. Employee Theft
* Jay P. Kennedy
* 21. Criminogenic Organizational Properties and Dynamics
* Wim Huisman
* 22. Organizational Self-Restraint
* Stelios C. Zyglidopoulos and Peter Fleming
* PART VII: REGULATORY OVERSIGHT
* 23. Oversight and Rule Making as Political Conflict
* Mary Kreiner Ramirez
* 24. Regulation: From Traditional to Cooperative
* Neil Gunningham
* 25. Comparing Assumptions Underlying Regulatory Inspection
Strategies: Implications for Oversight Policy
* Peter Mascini
* 26. The Credibility of Oversight and Aggregate Rates of White-Collar
Crime
* Wei Wang and Hongming Cheng
* PART VIII: CRIMINAL SANCTIONS
* 27. Investigating and Prosecuting White-Collar Criminals
* Lucian E. Dervan and Ellen S. Podgor
* 28. Sentencing Respectable Offenders
* Michael Levi
* 29. Effects on White-Collar Defendants of Criminal Justice Attention
and Sanctions
* Brian K. Payne
* 30. White-Collar Crime and Perceptual Deterrence
* Ray Paternoster and Stephen G. Tibbetts
* PART IX: PUBLIC POLICY
* 31. The Practical Challenges of Responding to Corporate Crime
* Peter Cleary Yeager
* 32. Public Opinion and Public Policy on White-Collar Crime
* Shanna R. Van Slyke and Donald J. Rebovich