Understanding White-Collar Crime: An Opportunity Perspective / Edition 2

Understanding White-Collar Crime: An Opportunity Perspective / Edition 2

ISBN-10:
0415704030
ISBN-13:
9780415704038
Pub. Date:
12/12/2014
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
ISBN-10:
0415704030
ISBN-13:
9780415704038
Pub. Date:
12/12/2014
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
Understanding White-Collar Crime: An Opportunity Perspective / Edition 2

Understanding White-Collar Crime: An Opportunity Perspective / Edition 2

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Overview

Unlike other books of its kind, Understanding White-Collar Crime: An Opportunity Perspective uses a coherent theoretical perspective in its coverage of white-collar crime. Using opportunity perspective, or the assumption that all crimes depend on offenders having some sort of opportunity to commit an offense, allows the authors to uncover the processes leading up to white-collar crimes and offer potential solutions to this rampant issue, without being reductive in their treatment of the topic. With this second edition, Benson and Simpson have greatly expanded their coverage to include new case studies, substantive materials, and an annotated appendix of online resources to make this a core book for courses on white-collar crime.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780415704038
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 12/12/2014
Series: Criminology and Justice Studies Series
Edition description: Older Edition
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Michael L. Benson is Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Cincinnati. He is a past President of the White-Collar Crime Research Consortium. He has published extensively in the areas of white-collar crime, intimate partner violence, and life course criminology. With Francis T. Cullen, he authored Combating Corporate Crime: Local Prosecutors at Work, which received the Outstanding Scholarship Award in 2000 from the Crime and Delinquency Division of the Society for the Study of Social Problems. The second edition of his book Crime and the Life Course: An Introduction was published in 2013 by Routledge. He is currently working on a book on emotions, choice and crime.

Sally S. Simpson is Director of the Center for the Study of Business Ethics, Regulation, and Crime (C-BERC) and Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Maryland, College Park. She is the Principal Investigator (with Peter C. Yeager, Boston University) on a Bureau of Justice Statistics grant to build a federal white-collar offending statistical series and is working with Mark Cohen (Vanderbilt University) and colleague Tom Loughran on project funded by the National Institute of Justice to study the public willingness to pay for white-collar crime control. She has authored/edited 5 books and over 70 articles, chapters, and reports—many on the subject of white-collar/corporate crime.

In 2013, Simpson was awarded the Gilbert Geis Lifetime Achievement Award by the White-Collar Crime Research Consortium. She is a Fellow of the American Society of Criminology and, in 2008, was named Distinguished Scholar by the Division on Women and Crime, American Society of Criminology. Simpson has served as President of the Association of Doctoral Programs in Criminology and Criminal Justice, is former Chair of the Crime, Law, and Deviance Section of the American Sociological Association and past President of the White-Collar Crime Research Consortium. Recipient of the Herbert Bloch Award from the American Society of Criminology, in 2010 Simpson was named Woman of the Year by the President's Commission on Women's Issues at the University of Maryland.

Table of Contents

Part I. An Introduction and Overview of White-Collar Crime 1. What Is White-Collar Crime 2. Who is the White-Collar Offender Part II Criminological Theory and the Opportunity Perspective 3. Explaining White-Collar Crime: Traditional Criminological Theories 4. Explaining White-Collar Crime: The Opportunity Perspective Part III. Applying the Opportunity Perspective to White-Collar Crimes 5. Financial Crimes in Health Care, Mortgages, Securities, and Markets. 6. Corporate Violence: Environmental and Workplace Offenses Part IV. The Symbolic Construction and Social Distribution of Opportunities 7. The Symbolic Construction of Opportunity: The Neutralization and Normalization of Deviance 8. Social Distribution of Opportunity: Class, Gender, and Race Part V. Control, Prevention and the Future of White-Collar Crime 9. Legal Controls: The Criminal Justice, Regulatory, and Civil Justice Systems 10. Extra-Legal Controls and Situational Prevention of White-Collar Crime 11. Opportunities and the Future of White-Collar Crime

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