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White-Collar Crime
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White-Collar Crime
A Text/Reader



January 2012 | 720 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
White-Collar Crime: A Text/Reader, part of the text/reader series in criminology and criminal justice incorporates contemporary and classic readings (some including policy implications) accompanied by original text that provides a theoretical framework and context for students.

The comprehensive coverage of the book includes:

- crimes by workers sales oriented systems

- crimes in the health care system

- crimes by criminal justice professionals and politicians

- crimes in the educational system

- crimes in the economic and technological systems

- crimes by employees in the housing industry

- corporate crime

- environmental crime

- explanations of white-collar crime

- the police and court responses to white-collar crime

- the corrections sub-system and white-collar crime.

Features of the book include key points, in focus box inserts, discussion questions, section summaries, and photos.

 
Foreword
 
Preface
 
Acknowledgments
 
SECTION I. Introduction and Overview of White-Collar Crime: A Systems Perspective
 
How to Read a Research Article
 
Reading:
 
1. Crime and Business, by Edwin H. Sutherland
 
SECTION II. Understanding White-Collar Crime: Definitions, Extent, and Consequences
 
Readings:
 
2. White-Collar and Professional Crime: The Challenge for the 1980s, by Herbert Edelhertz
 
3. Occupational Crime, Occupational Deviance, and Workplace Crime: Sorting Out the Differences, by David O. Friedrichs
 
SECTION III. Crimes in Sales-Related Occupations: A Systems Perspective
 
Readings:
 
4. The Appliance Repairman: A Study of Victim-Responsiveness and Fraud, by Diane Vaughan and Giovanna Carlo
 
5. Employee Theft and Efficacy of Certain Control Procedures in Commercial Food Service Operations, by Richard Ghiselliand Joseph A. Ismail
 
SECTION IV. Crimes in the Health Care System
 
Readings:
 
6. The Enforcement of Criminal Laws: Testimony to the House od Representatives Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security, by James Frogue
 
7. Illicit Prescription Drug Use Among Pharmacists: Evidence of a Paradox of Familiarity, by Dean A. Dabney and Richard C. Hollinger
 
SECTION V. Crime in Systems of Social Control: White-Collar Crime in Criminal Justice, Political, and Religious Systems
 
Readings:
 
8. Violated Trust: Conceptualizing Prosecutorial Misconduct, by Heather Schoenfeld
 
9. Uncollaring the Criminal: Understanding the Criminal Careers of Criminal Clerics, by Alex R. Piquero, Nicole Leeper Piquero, Karen J. Terry, Tasha Youstin, and Matt Nobles
 
SECTION VI. Crimes in the Educational System
 
Readings:
 
10. Intimidating Education: Sexual Harassment in Criminology, by Elizabeth A. Stanko
 
11. ORI Findings of Scientific Misconduct in Clinical Trials and Publicly Funded Research, 1992-2002, by Sandra M. Reynolds
 
SECTION VII. Crime in the Economic and Technological Systems
 
Readings:
 
12. Insider Trading: The SEC Meets Karl Karcher, by Elizabeth Szockyj
 
13. Cybercrime Against Businesses, by Ramona R. Rantala
 
SECTION VIII. Crimes in the Housing System
 
Readings:
 
14. The Mortgage Meltdown as Normal Accidental Wrongdoing, by Donald Palmer and Michael W. Maher
 
15. 2009 Mortgage Fraud Report "Year in Review," by the Federal Bureau of Investigation
 
SECTION IX. Crimes by the Corporate System
 
Readings:
 
16. Is Corporate Crime Serious Crime? Criminal Justice and Corporate Crime Control, by Ronald C. Kramer
 
17. Food for Thought: An Investigation of Food and Drug Administration Reporting Practices, 1995-1999, by Michael J. Lynch, Roonald J. Burns, and Jefferson E. Holcomb
 
SECTION X. Environmental Crime
 
Readings:
 
18. Corporate Environmental Crimes and Social Inequality: New Directions for Environmental Justice Research, by David R. Simon
 
19. Crimes Against the Environment: Superfund Enforcement at Last, by Harold C. Barnett
 
SECTION XI. Explaining White-Collar Crime
 
Readings:
 
20. Are White-Collar and Common Offenders the Same? An Empirical and Theoretical Critique of a Recently Proposed General Theory of Crime, by Michael L. Benson and Elizabeth Moore
 
21. Completely Out of Control or the Desire to Be in Control? How Low Self-Control and the Desire for Control Relate to Corporate Offending, by Nicole Leeper Piquero, Andrea Schoepfer, and Lynn Langton
 
22. White-Collar Crime and Criminal Careers: Specifying a Trajectory of Punctuated Situational Offending, by Nicole Leeper Piquero and Michael L. Benson
 
SECTION XII. Policing White-Collar Crime
 
Readings:
 
23. Documenting Inadequate Care in the Nursing Home: The Story of an Undercover Agent, by Garrett E. Speaks
 
24. Government Whistleblowers: Crime's Hidden Victims, by Carleen A. Botsko and Robert C. Wells
 
SECTION XIII. Judicial Proceedings and White-Collar Crime
 
Readings:
 
25. Local Prosecutors and Corporate Crime, by Michael L. Benson, Francis T. Cullen, and William J. Maakestad
 
26. Whistleblowing and Lawyers, by Barbara A. Belbot
 
SECTION XIV. The Corrections Subsystem and White-Collar Crime
 
Readings:
 
27. The Special Sensitivity of White-Collar Offenders to Prison: A Critique and Research Agenda, by Michael L. Benson and Francis T. Cullen
 
28. "Club Fed" in Japan? Incarceration Experiences of Japanese Embezzlers, by Jurg Gerber
 
29. White-Collar Crime and Criminal Careers: Some Preliminary Findings, by David Weisburd, Ellen F. Chayet, and Elin J. Waring
 
Glossary
 
References
 
Credits and Sources
 
Index
 
About the Author

A good key text addressing the ever increasing levels of White Collar Crime and its detection in the work place. This would be ideal for stdudies in Security and Rsik Management at all levels.

Mr Andrew O'Brien
Public Servies, Peterborough Regional College
April 8, 2014

I really like the combined text and reader.

Dr Kent Kerley
Political Science Dept, University of Alabama at Birmingham
October 8, 2013

This book is a perfect example of where ethics is not just a question of personal values. It highlights the challenges of enforcement and a new way of managing the protection of whistle-blowers. White-collar crime is a growing phenomena that needs to be examined and discussed in the class room. This is especially pertinent for students interested in business ethics and corporate governance.

Dr Pamela Robinson
International Management , Birmingham University
June 25, 2013

This book is also excellent and goes well with the essentials.

Dr Mark Button
Institute of Criminal Justice Studies, Portsmouth University
September 7, 2012

This is a good combination of original research (readings) and summary text.

Dr Danielle MacCartney
Behavioral Social Science Dept, Webster University
August 20, 2012

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