Corporate Crime, Law, and Social Control
Why do corporations comply with the law? When companies violate the law, what kinds of interventions are most apt to return them to compliant status? The purpose of this book is to examine whether a shift toward the use of criminal law with its emphasis on punishment and stigmatization will be a successful crime control strategy. The author reviews whether current legal systems based in criminal, civil, and regulatory law "deter" corporate crime. She concludes that strict criminalization models that rely on punishments will not yield sufficiently high levels of compliance.
- Provides a review of criminal, civil, and regulatory legal systems as they relate to corporate crime control
- Contrasts strengths and weaknesses of control strategies based in deterrence and cooperation
- Incorporates original research from two empirical surveys
Reviews & endorsements
"...this provocative book will stimulate readers to think about a wide range of issues in addition to the important question of deterrence that lies at its core." The Law and Politics Book Review
Product details
March 2002Hardback
9780521580830
196 pages
240 × 160 × 20 mm
0.44kg
14 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Criminalizing the corporate control process
- 2. Deterrence in review
- 3. Assessing the failure of corporate deterrence
- 4. Corporate deterrence and civil justice
- 5. Deterrence and regulatory justice
- 6. Alternatives to criminalization: cooperative models of corporate compliance
- 7. Why comply? Criminalization versus cooperation: an empirical test
- 8. Shaping the contours of control.