
Contents
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I. Definitional Matters I. Definitional Matters
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A. Organizational and Organized Crime A. Organizational and Organized Crime
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B. Corporate and State-Corporate Crime B. Corporate and State-Corporate Crime
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C. Illegalities and Unethical Conduct C. Illegalities and Unethical Conduct
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II. Data Sources II. Data Sources
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III. Explaining Variation in Organizational Crime III. Explaining Variation in Organizational Crime
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A. Aggregate Level A. Aggregate Level
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B. Organization Level B. Organization Level
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IV. Organizational Criminal Careers IV. Organizational Criminal Careers
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V. Responses to Organizational Crime V. Responses to Organizational Crime
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A. Regulatory Agencies A. Regulatory Agencies
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B. Investigation and Prosecution B. Investigation and Prosecution
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C. Courts and Sentencing C. Courts and Sentencing
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D. Private Actions: Victims and Informants D. Private Actions: Victims and Informants
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VI. Economic Globalization VI. Economic Globalization
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A. Competition, Lure, and Oversight A. Competition, Lure, and Oversight
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B. Regulation as Compliance Assistance B. Regulation as Compliance Assistance
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C. Trends in Organizational Crime C. Trends in Organizational Crime
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VII. Research Agenda VII. Research Agenda
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References References
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11 Organizational Crime
Get accessNeal Shover is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Tennessee.
Jennifer Scroggins is a doctoral candidate in sociology at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
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Published:18 September 2012
Cite
Abstract
This article reviews and assesses theory and research on organizational crime. It notes the behavioral distinctiveness of acts considered under this procedure. Sources of data and methods used in studies of organizational crime are also discussed. This article documents variation in the distribution of organizational crime and the application of rational choice theory for its explanation. It provides a description about organizational criminal careers and reports about state and private responses to organizational crime. The next section examines the effects of economic globalization on competition, oversight, and organizational crime. It presents a research agenda for further attention and investigation. The record of research on organizational crime shows the need for increased attention on international organizational crime, the enhanced understanding of the contexts and meanings of organizational crime, comparative studies of regulatory oversight styles, and better statistical information.
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