Wiley handbooks in criminology and criminal justice
GENERAL NOTES
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Machine generated contents note: Handbook on White-Collar Crime Table of Contents Preface Author: Melissa Rorie (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) Introduction Author: Melissa Rorie (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) Section I. What is White Collar Crime? Chapter 1. The "Discovery" of White-Collar Crime: Edwin Sutherland's Legacy Authors: Aleksandra Jordanoska (University of Manchester), Isabel Schoultz (Lunds University) Chapter 2. Definitional Debates and The Case for a Typological Approach Author: David Friedrichs (The University of Scranton) Chapter 3. Measuring White-Collar Crime Author: April Wall (National White-Collar Crime Center) Section II. Extent and Cost of White-Collar Crimes Chapter 4. Types of Harm, Extent of Harm, and the Victims of Occupational Crimes Author: Petter Gottschalk (BI Norwegian Business School) Chapter 5. From Economic Crime to Corporate Violence: The Multifaceted Harms of Corporate Crime Author: Gabrio Forti (Universita Cattolic del Sacro Cuore), Arianna Visconti (Universita Cattolic del Sacro Cuore) Chapter 6. Beyond State and State-Corporate Crime Typologies: The Symbiotic Nature, Harm, and Victimization of Crimes of the Powerful and Their Continuation Author: Dawn Rothe (Eastern Kentucky University), Corina Medley (Eastern Kentucky University) Section III. What We Know About White-Collar Offending Chapter 7. Who commits Occupational Crimes? Authors: Michael Benson (University of Cincinnati), Hei Chio (University of Cincinnati) Chapter 8. Who commits Corporate Crime? Author: Mary Dodge (University of Colorado-Denver) Chapter 9. State-Corporate Crimes Authors: Ignasi Bernat (University of Girona), David Whyte (University of Liverpool) Chapter 10. Blurred Lines: Collusions Between Legitimate and Illegitimate Organizations Author: Wim Huisman (Vrije Universiteit-Amsterdam) Chapter 11. Explaining White-Collar Crime: Individual-Level Theories Authors: Rachel Severson (University of South Florida), Zachary Kodatt (Southern Illinois University-Carbondale), George Burruss (University of South Florida) Chapter 12. Organizational and Macro-Level Corporate Crime Theories Author: Jay Kennedy (Michigan State University) Chapter 13. Integrated Theories of White-Collar and Corporate Crime Authors: Fiona Chan (Michigan State University), Carole Gibbs (Michigan State University) Section IV. Preventing and Punishing White-Collar Crimes Chapter 14. Public Opinion About White-Collar Crime Author: Francis T. Cullen (University of Cincinnati), Cecilia Chouhy (Florida State University), Cheryl Lero Jonson (Xavier University) Chapter 15. Preventing White Collar Crime from Within: Compliance Management, Whistleblowing and Internal Monitoring Author: Benjamin van Rooij (University of California-Irvine), Adam Fine (University of California-Irvine) Chapter 16. Preventing and Intervening in White-Collar Crimes: The Role of Law Enforcement Author: Nicholas Lord (University of Manchester), Karin van Wingerde (Erasmus University-Rotterdam) Chapter 17. Preventing and Intervening in White-Collar Crimes: The Role of Regulatory Agencies Author: Nicholas Ryder (University of West England, Bristol), Angela Francis (University of West England, Bristol) Chapter 18. Prosecution, Defense, and Sentencing of White Collar Crime Author: Ronald Burns (Texas Christian University), Michele Meitl (Texas Christian University) Chapter 19. The Correctional Experiences of White-Collar Offenders Author: Ben Hunter (University of Greenwich) Chapter 20. Punishing Corporations Author: Mark Cohen (Vanderbilt University) Section V. White Collar Crime: An International Perspective Chapter 21. White-Collar and Corporate Crime: European Perspectives Author: Christian Walburg (University of Muenster) Chapter 22. White Collar and Corporate Crime in China Author: Henry Pontell (John Jay College of Criminal Justice), Adam Ghazi-Tehrani (University of Alabama), Bryan Burton (Southern Utah University) Chapter 23. White-Collar Crime in South and Central America: Corporate-State Crime, Governance and the High Impact of the Odebrecht Corruption Case Author: Diego Zysman (Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina) Chapter 24. Prosecuting and Sentencing White-Collar Crime in U.S. Federal Courts: Revisiting the Yale Findings Author: Miranda A. Galvin (University of Maryland-College Park), Sally S. Simpson (University of Maryland-College Park) Chapter 25. Market Criminology: A Critical Engagement with Primitive Accumulation in the Petroleum Extraction Industry in Africa Author: Ifeanyi Ezeonu (Brock University) Chapter 26. Researching White-Collar Crime: An Australian Perspective Author: Arie Freiberg (Monash University) Chapter 27: Review of Comparative Studies on White-Collar and Corporate Crime Author: Tomomi Kawasaki (Doshisha University) Section VI. Emerging White-Collar Crime Issues Chapter 28. Technology's Influence on White-Collar Offending, Reporting, and Investigation Authors: Tom Holt (Michigan State University), Jay Kennedy (Michigan State University) Chapter 29. The Elusiveness of Corporate and White-Collar Crime in a Globalized Economy Authors: Karin van Wingerde (Erasmus University), Nicholas Lord (University of Manchester) Chapter 30. Controlling Corporate Crimes in Times of De-Regulation and Re-Regulation Author: Steven Bittle (University of Ottowa).
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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"The primary strength of the handbook is that it will cover a broad range of topics from many different perspectives, accomplished using nationally and internationally recognized experts in the field. Despite this broad coverage, though, this book will provide clarity for scholars of white-collar crime by clearly distinguishing what is known about specific types of crime within this broad paradigm. In addition, this book will be written to be more approachable for readers at the undergraduate level, practitioners, and the public--but will also have information relevant for advanced academic scholars. Finally, this book will recruit manuscripts from young scholars (as well as established scholars) and from international researchers in countries not often represented in this field. Specifically, we include chapters examining white-collar crimes in Africa and Central/South America--these continents are woefully underrepresented in the field of white-collar crime"--