Journal of White Collar and Corporate Crime
The Journal of White Collar and Corporate Crime is an international and a multidisciplinary, peer-reviewed academic journal featuring high quality contributions from a community of global scholars and researchers. The journal is aimed at uncovering the interrelations of theoretical and empirical investigation of the crimes of powerfully organized people while advancing the knowledge of white collar and corporate crime as well as the practices of social intervention and policy change. Conceptually, the journal is concerned with studying white collar and corporate crime in relation to both power and the powerful, and is open to a myriad of lenses and to the historical relations between law, criminology, economics, accounting, compliance, regulation, securitization, and financialization. The journal is broad-gauged, inclusive, and robust in its overall scope and accommodation of substantive and policy disciplines alike. The journal welcomes qualitative and quantitative studies of white collar, corporate, organized, transnational, state, nonstate, and state-corporate crime, as each of these areas of classification and inquiry are indicative of the routinization of the crimes of the powerful. This journal is a member of COPE.
Anne Alvesalo-Kuusi | University of Turku, Finland |
Kristy Holtfreter | Arizona State University, USA |
Anne Alvesalo-Kuusi | University of Turku, Finland |
Gregg Barak | Eastern Michigan University, USA |
Steven Bittle | University of Ottawa, Canada |
Kenneth S. Leon | Rutgers University at New Brunswick, USA |
Nicole Leeper Piquero | University of Miami, USA |
Isabel Schoultz | Lund University, Sweden |
José Atiles | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA |
Hanna Malik | University of Turku, Finland |
Gregg L. Barak | Eastern Michigan University, USA |
Kimberly Barrett | Eastern Michigan University, USA |
Michael Benson | University of Cincinnati, USA |
Steven Bittle | University of Ottawa, Canada |
Maria Laura Böhm | University of Buenos Aires, Argentina |
John Braithwaite | Australian National University, Australia |
Bryan Burton | Sonoma State University, USA |
Marilia de Nardin Budó | Federal University of Santa Maria, Brazil |
Mary Dodge | University of Colorado Denver, USA |
Jacqueline M. Drew | Griffith University, Australia |
Serena Favarin | Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy |
John Hagan | Northwestern University, USA |
Kristy Holtfreter | Arizona State University, USA |
Aleksandra Jordanoska | University of Manchester, UK |
Ivy Ken | George Washington University |
Jay P. Kennedy | Amazon, USA |
Ronald C. Kramer | Western Michigan University, USA |
Paul Leighton | Eastern Michigan University, USA |
Michael Levi | Cardiff University, UK |
Nicholas Lord | University of Manchester, UK |
Michael Lynch | University of South Florida, USA |
Abiola Makinwa | The Hague University, The Netherlands |
Raymond J. Michalowski | Northern Arizona University, USA |
Nikos Passas | Northeastern University, USA |
Brian K. Payne | Old Dominion University, USA |
Henry N. Pontell | John Jay College, USA and University of California Irvine, USA |
Melissa Rorie | OMNI Institute, USA |
Dawn Rothe | Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida |
Vincenzo Ruggiero | Middlesex University, UK |
Jon Petter Rui | University of Bergen, Norway |
Puma Shen | National Taipei University |
Laureen Snider | Queen's University, Canada |
Tina Søreide | Norwegian School of Economics (NHH), Norway |
Steve Tombs | Open University, UK |
Judith van Erp | Utrecht University, The Netherlands |
Karin van Wingerde | Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands |
David L. Weisburd | Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel and George Mason University, USA |
David Whyte | University of Liverpool, UK |
Stephanie Geoghan | Arizona State University, USA |