Notes on Contributors viiiPreface xvMelissa L. RorieIntroduction xviiiMelissa L. RorieSection I What is White-Collar Crime? 11 The "Discovery" of White-Collar Crime: The Legacy of Edwin Sutherland 3Aleksandra Jordanoska and Isabel Schoultz2 White Collar Crime: Definitional Debates and the Case for a Typological Approach 16David O. Friedrichs3 Measuring White Collar Crime 32April Wall-ParkerSection II Extent and Cost of White-Collar Crimes 454 Types of Harm, Extent of Harm, and the Victims of Occupational Crimes 47Petter Gottschalk5 From Economic Crime to Corporate Violence: The Multifaceted Harms of Corporate Crime 64Gabrio Forti and Arianna Visconti6 Beyond State and State-Corporate Crime Typologies: The Symbiotic Nature, Harm, and Victimization of Crimes of the Powerful and Their Continuation 81Dawn L. Rothe and Corina MedleySection III What We Know About White-Collar Offending 957 Who Commits Occupational Crimes? 97Michael L. Benson and Hei Lam Chio8 Who Commits Corporate Crime? 113Mary Dodge9 State-Corporate Crimes 127Ignasi Bernat and David Whyte10 Blurred Lines: Collusions Between Legitimate and Illegitimate Organizations 139Wim Huisman11 Explaining White-Collar Crime: Individual-Level Theories 159Rachel E. Severson, Zachery H. Kodatt, and George W. Burruss12 Organizational and Macro-Level Corporate Crime Theories 175Jay P. Kennedy13 Integrated Theories of White-Collar and Corporate Crime 191Fiona Chan and Carole GibbsSection IV Preventing and Punishing White-Collar Crimes 20914 Public Opinion About White-Collar Crime 211Francis T. Cullen, Cecilia Chouhy, and Cheryl Lero Jonson15 Preventing Corporate Crime from Within: Compliance Management, Whistleblowing, and Internal Monitoring 229Benjamin van Rooij and Adam D. Fine16 Preventing and Intervening in White-Collar Crimes: The Role of Law Enforcement 246Nicholas Lord and Karin van Wingerde17 Preventing and Intervening in White Collar Crimes: The Role of Regulatory Agencies 262Angela Francis and Nicholas Ryder18 Prosecution, Defense, and Sentencing of White-Collar Crime 279Ronald G. Burns and Michele Bisaccia Meitl19 The Correctional Experiences of White-Collar Offenders 297Ben Hunter20 Punishing Corporations 314Mark A. CohenSection V White-Collar Crime: An International Perspective 33521 White-Collar and Corporate Crime: European Perspectives 337Christian Walburg22 White-Collar and Corporate Crime in China 347Henry N. Pontell, Adam K. Ghazi-Tehrani, and Bryan Burton23 White-Collar Crime in South and Central America: Corporate-State Crime, Governance, and the High Impact of the Odebrecht Corruption Case 363Diego Zysman-Quirós24 Prosecuting and Sentencing White-Collar Crime in US Federal Courts: Revisiting the Yale Findings 381Miranda A. Galvin and Sally S. Simpson25 Market Criminology: A Critical Engagement with Primitive Accumulation in the Petroleum Extraction Industry in Africa 398Ifeanyi Ezeonu26 Researching White-Collar Crime: An Australian Perspective 418Arie Freiberg27 Review of Comparative Studies on White-Collar and Corporate Crime 437Tomomi KawasakiSection VI Emerging White-Collar Crime Issues 44928 Technology's Influence on White-Collar Offending, Reporting, and Investigation 451Thomas J. Holt and Jay P. Kennedy29 The Elusiveness of White-Collar and Corporate Crime in a Globalized Economy 469Karin van Wingerde and Nicholas Lord30 Controlling Corporate Crimes in Times of De-regulation and Re-regulation 484Steven Bittle and Jasmine HébertIndex 502
Dr. Melissa L. Rorie is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Nevada - Las Vegas, USA. Her research focuses on the impact of formal and informal controls on corporate and white-collar offending. Dr. Rorie has published numerous peer-reviewed articles for journals including Crime, Law and Social Change, Criminology & Public Policy, Law & Policy, and the Journal of Quantitative Criminology. She has also had her research published in a range of handbooks and readers.